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"The Barroom Girls" and Other StoriesMortazavi, Sohale Andrus 05 1900 (has links)
This creative thesis is comprised of five original short stories and a critical preface. The preface discusses the changing cultural, sociopolitical, and socioeconomic landscape of the modern American South and the effects-positive, negative, and neutral-these changes have had on the region's contemporary literature, including the short stories contained within.
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RubyBrantley, Jennifer Susan January 2010 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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Aristocratic drag : the dandy in Irish and Southern fictionCrowell, Ellen Margaret 02 August 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Race, women, and the South Faulkner's connection to and separation from the Fugitive-Agrarian tradition /Stearns, Brandi, January 2005 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.) -- University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 2005. / Title from title page screen (viewed on February 1, 2006). Thesis advisor: Thomas Haddox. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Writing under the aspect of eternity making myth in modern Southern literature /Lantz, Maria Rose. January 2010 (has links)
Honors Project--Smith College, Northampton, Mass., 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 77-79).
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Personal Archaeology: PoemsSweeden, R. Renee 05 1900 (has links)
A collection of poems focused primarily on rural America and the South, the creative writing thesis also includes material concerned with the history of Mexico, particularly Mexico at the time of the Spanish Conquest. The introduction combines a personal essay with critical material discussing and defining the idea of the Southern writer.
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Dark Houses: Navigating Space and Negotiating Silence in the Novels of Faulkner, Warren and MorrisonBerger, Aimee E. 12 1900 (has links)
Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher," as early as 1839, reveals an uneasiness about the space of the house. Most literary scholars accept that this anxiety exists and causes some tension, since it seems antithetical to another dominant motif, that of the power of place and the home as sanctuary. My critical persona, like Poe's narrator in "The House of Usher," looks into a dark, silent tarn and shudders to see in it not only the reflection of the House of Usher, but perhaps the whole of what is "Southern" in Southern Literature. Many characters who inhabit the worlds of Southern stories also inhabit houses that, like the House of Usher, are built on the faulty foundation of an ideological system that divides the world into inside(r)/outside(r) and along numerous other binary lines. The task of constructing the self in spaces that house such ideologies poses a challenge to the characters in the works under consideration in this study, and their success in doing so is dependant on their ability to speak authentically in the language of silence and to dwell instead of to just inhabit interior spaces. In my reading of Faulkner and Warren, this ideology of division is clearly to be at fault in the collapse of houses, just as it is seen to be in the House of Usher. This emphasis is especially conspicuous in several works, beginning with Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom! and its (pre)text, "Evangeline." Warren carries the motif forward in his late novels, Flood and Meet Me in the Green Glen. I examine these works relative to spatial analysis and an aesthetic of absence, including an interpretation of silence as a mode of authentic saying. I then discuss these motifs as they are operating in Toni Morrison's Beloved, and finally take Song of Solomon as both an end and a beginning to these texts' concerns with collapsing structures of narrative and house.
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