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  • 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.
1

Writing outside the box : exploring a nomadic alternative in contemporary French and Francophone literature /

Harrington, Katharine N. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Brown University, 2005. / Vita. Thesis advisor: Réda Bensmaïa. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 196-204). Also available online.
2

Self-selection : constructions of identity in migrant-Irish autobiography (1914-2004)

March, Jessica January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
3

Strange at home, stranger abroad women, borderlands and the uncanny /

Adelman, Lizzie. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (B.A.)--Bi-College (Haverford and Bryn Mawr Colleges) Comparative Literature Program, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references.
4

Das Motiv des Auswanderers und des Heimkehrers bei Wilhelm Raabe

Erhorn, Walter Karl Gerhard Wilhelm, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--New York University, 1939. / "Dieser Auszug gibt alle Teile der Arbeit mit Ausnahme von BII in nur wenig gekürzter Form wieder." Cf. p.3. Includes bibliographical references (p. 29-30).
5

Prostitution chez Calixthe Beyala race, corps, regard /

Mouflard, Claire Angélique. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Montana, 2007. / Title from title screen. Description based on contents viewed Aug. 7, 2007. Includes bibliographical references (p. 28-29).
6

Writing emigration : Canada in Scottish romanticism, 1802-1840

Rieley, Honor January 2016 (has links)
This thesis is a study of the representation of emigration to Canada in Scottish Romantic periodicals and fiction, and of the relationship between these genres and the little-studied genre of the emigrant's guide. Chapter One tracks the Edinburgh Review and Quarterly Review's reviews of books on Canadian topics and demonstrates how the rival quarterlies respond to, and intervene in, the evolving public debate about emigration. Chapter Two examines depictions of Canada in Blackwood's Magazine and Fraser's Magazine, and reveals connections between these magazines' engagement with Canadian affairs and the concurrent reception of Scottish Romanticism in early Canadian literary magazines. Chapter Three argues for an understanding of the emigrant's guide as a porous form that acts as a bridge between nonfictional and fictional representations of emigration. Chapter Four reads novels with emigration plots in relation to the pressures of American, Canadian and transatlantic canon formation, arguing that these novels trouble the stark division between the American and Canadian emigrant experiences which was insisted upon by contemporary commentators and which continues to underpin criticism of transatlantic literary works. Chapter Five considers the relationship between Scottish Romanticism and nineteenth-century Canadian literature, a relationship which has often been framed in terms of the portability of a 'Scottish model' of fiction associated most strongly with Walter Scott. Overall, this thesis contends that foregrounding the literature of emigration allows for greater understanding of the synchronicity of Scottish Romanticism and the escalation of transatlantic emigration, offering an alternative to conceptions of Canada's colonial and transatlantic belatedness.
7

Maritime Lacunae

Taveras, Miriam S 01 January 2021 (has links)
The thread between the immigrant experience and the concept of silence has survived centuries of migrant stories, proving itself as one of the largest cultural barriers challenging the immigrant's sense of belonging. Scholars and essayists have thoroughly examined silence as a theme in immigrant and diaspora literature. Yet, the work that immigrant poets have performed to navigate silence and negative space through the manipulation of language has received little academic attention. This thesis studies the work of Latinx and Asian-American poets and their interpretations of silence as either a source of empowerment or oppression. When considering silence's contrasting functions in poetry—to either mute or heighten the possibility of language—the thesis found that silence can establish tensions that complicate the immigrant experience, evidenced further by the poets' use of themes representing loss, fear, place, and memory as negatives and positives in the immigrant's journey. The creative part of this thesis follows a chapbook of poems that examine and apply restrictive form into the study of silence and negative space as poetic devices. These poems form a Latinx quilt that embraces silence as a means for communication—like a brother to language—rather than as an oppressor. The resulting work will delineate the journey out of shame and out of hiding that undocumented immigrants must traverse to achieve the freedom of identity in their own self-carved third space.
8

The South Asian diaspora in the Caribbean: migration, nationalism, and exodus in the contemporary Indo-Guyanese literature

Unknown Date (has links)
This dissertation proposes a two-part thesis on the South Asian diaspora in the Caribbean within contemporary Indo-Guyanese literature. First, Indo-Guyanese writers such as David Dabydeen, Oonya Kempadoo, and Narmala Shewcharan are using the genre of historical fiction to posit counter narratives that undermine dominant narratives of South Asian culture and gender roles. Second, even as these writers struggle against dominant narratives, their texts reinscribe the colonial discourse and rearticulate racial stereotypes. As argued in this dissertation, the dismal historical realities of ethnic tensions and failed anti-colonial tactics do not sufficiently address the flexible strategies often chosen by the characters and authors to navigate through racial and political convolution. By analyzing works by Indo-Guyanese, I attempt to open a conversation about race, place, and politics, offering some external viewpoints and revealing some important insights into the problems and contradict ions in Guyana. The value of these works is the calling for a connection to history as both a positive example (texts that show gaps in which characters can negotiate social borders) and a negative model (works that amplify racial tension and dismiss the divide and conquer strategy of the colonizer). This twofold thesis develops along three crucial historical periods - the dislocation from India and the heavy burden of indentured labor in British Guiana (1838-1917), ethnic victimization during post-independence (1970), and the subsequent flight to the First World (1980-1990): migration, nationalism, and exodus. / Chapter 1 reveals the challenges of indentured labor through East Indian and African characters that disrupts racial and gender borders in David Dabydeen's The Counting House. Chapter 2 exposes the racial tensions following independence as the newly formed government creates an atmosphere of distrust in Oonya Kempadoo's and Narmala Shewcharan's debut novels. Chap suggests the ramifications of exodus as Guyanese reconfigure their identity in a new location in David Dabydeen's narratives. This body of work by Indo-Guyanese plays upon the complex web of historical, political, and racial constructs that coexist simultaneously as authors acknowledge the limits and potential of their colonized history, of nationalist movements, and the rebuilding that is left in its wake. / by Savena Budhu. / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2010. / Includes bibliography. / Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2010. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
9

The importance of being elsewhere : modernist expatriation and the American literary tradition

Muller, Adam Patrick Dooley. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
10

The importance of being elsewhere : modernist expatriation and the American literary tradition

Muller, Adam Patrick Dooley. January 1997 (has links)
My dissertation concentrates on Americans writing at home and abroad in the inter-war period and contextualizes their expatriation with reference to debates between modernist critics over the nature and substance of the American literary tradition. I clarify the definitions of terms like "exile," "emigrant," and "expatriate" central to my analysis but muddied by years of misuse. I do so with reference to coercion, a concept which I develop in accordance with recent work in the philosophy of action. At the same time I make the case for a realist, causalist hermeneutics. Next I explore the aesthetic corollary to my argument with reference to the fiction, autobiography, and literary criticism of Gertrude Stein. I argue that Stein's decision to leave America must be viewed as uncoerced, and as therefore indicative of her emigration to France. Viewed as an emigrant, and not as an exile or expatriate, Stein can be shown to manifest tendencies in her work (towards subjectivity, abstraction, and retrospection) which reflect her dissociation from, rather than ongoing connection to, America. Lastly, I look closely at the work of Van Wyck Brooks and Harold Stearns, two modernist literary and culture critics whose writings on expatriation demonstrably influenced generations of subsequent biographers and intellectual historians. Steams and Brooks can be counted among the most articulate and vociferous proponents of literary change in America, and can be situated at the poles of a vigorous debate within the literary community of their day over whether American letters were better served from within or without the United States. I contrast Brooks' civic humanism with Steams' rugged individualism and identify in the debate over expatriation a powerful analogue to ongoing debates in literary and cultural critical circles referred to as "the culture wars."

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