• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2143
  • 179
  • 157
  • 128
  • 58
  • 21
  • 14
  • 13
  • 13
  • 13
  • 13
  • 12
  • 10
  • 10
  • 10
  • Tagged with
  • 3323
  • 3323
  • 802
  • 538
  • 504
  • 354
  • 305
  • 299
  • 258
  • 246
  • 230
  • 216
  • 208
  • 186
  • 176
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
251

A Certain Threatening Picture: Images of Rape in Eudora Welty's "The Golden Apples"

Hannett, Laura A 01 January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
252

“I'm not the boy for you”: Images of African American male homosexuality

Robinson, Angelo DeWayne 01 January 2001 (has links)
This dissertation examines literary, cinematic, and photographic images of African American male homosexuality in light of religious, gender, sexual, and racial constraints. The reality of homosexuality is substantiated in Chapter 1 as the subtext in Baldwin's Go Tell It on the Mountain with John's homoerotic attraction to Elisha. In the same way that the novel proclaims the gospel of Christ, a declaration of the reality of homosexual desire is also proclaimed. Moreover, the novel challenges the traditional conversion experience in that the young protagonist is not “cured,” “healed,” or “delivered” of this desire but is restored to confront the reality of his homosexual desire and claim the promise of salvation. In Chapter 2, Baldwin's strategy to normalize homosexual desire despite the forces of masculinity is inspected His concept of sexuality is based on a fluid sexual identity rather than an exclusively fixed heterosexual or homosexual identity. As such, Baldwin's goal to normalize homosexuality by representing it as one form of sexual expression on a continuum at a given time rather than always the deviant and polarized opposite of heterosexuality is thematically examined. Chapter 3 explores how the intersection of race and the subject of masculinity convene to intensify black male homosexuality in the United States in light of racism and declarations by some in the black community that blackness does not include homosexuality because it is behavior learned from whites, that it is a form of self-hatred, and that it is traitorous to the African American community. Chapter 4 examines how the black male body has been central to the cultural production of homosexuality in American culture. The chapter inspects the racialization of homosexual desire with interracial pairings in literature, film, and photography. The chapter questions how the erotic desire for the black male body in the art of white mainstream culture relates to homoerotic images of the black male body offered by white gay artists to invite homoerotic desire. An inspection of photographs of black males that invite homoerotic desire by photographers of African descent complete the analysis of the homoerotic presentation of the black male body.
253

(Dis)Embodied Professionalisms: Doctors & Scientists In U.s. Literature, 1895-1935

Richards, Shaun F. 01 January 2021 (has links) (PDF)
The United States of America was founded upon patriarchal, white supremacist, and capitalist ideologies that have been concealed from the eyes of the world. (Dis)Embodied Professionalisms offers a viewpoint from which to see and understand how these traditions were mythologized during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries in the modern professions and its representative identity: the doctor-scientist. His professionalization consolidated the power-knowledge of the gaze into an ideal figure of disembodied masculine rational and scientific authority premised on a visual epistemology. Through close readings of four novels written by Harold Frederic, Charles W. Chesnutt, Sinclair Lewis, and F. Scott Fitzgerald during a crucial period of social transformation and uncertainty, this dissertation reveals how the paradox of disembodied professionalism culminated in a failed embodiment of authority. Through ocularcentric metaphors of the modern profession of scientific medicine, these writers articulate and elide the promise, ambivalence, and ultimate impossibility of what this dissertation calls the myth of professionalization and, thus, of the hegemony of traditional hierarchies.
254

The Fantasies of James Branch Cabell

Riemer, James D. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
255

An Exercise in Adjudication: Interpretations of Flannery O’ Connor’s The Violent Bear It Away

Hopkins, Karen J. January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
256

Character and Incident and the Exposure of Stereotype in the Works of Shelby Foote

Caldwell, Brenda Vaughn January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
257

Recurrent Themes in Asian American Autobiographical Literature

Suttilagsana, Supattra January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
258

Agricultural Promise and Disillusionment in the California Novel: Frank Norris, John Steinbeck, Raymond Barrio

LaPresto, Brigitte L. January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
259

The Pastoral Convention in the California Novels of Wallace Stegner

Burrows, James Russell January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
260

Writing as a Revolutionary Activity: Five Writers of the American Revolutionary Era

Telfer, Terry Albert January 1992 (has links)
No description available.

Page generated in 0.0812 seconds