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The last of the true the kid's place in Cormac Mccarthy's Blood Meridian /Clement, William Dean. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--University of Montana, 2009. / Contents viewed on November 29, 2009. Title from author supplied metadata. Includes bibliographical references.
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Ocular ground : visuality in Cormac McCarthy's westerns /Mayne, Natasha. January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Queensland, 2003. / Includes bibliography.
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Cormac McCarthy's cold pastoral : the overturning of a national allegoryO'Sullivan, James Stephen January 2015 (has links)
This dissertation will argue that the novels of Cormac McCarthy represent a sustained attack on American literature's abiding fixation with pastoral. It further argues that such a fixation is very much a national allegory, one that, paradoxically, cannot help but produce a sense of doubt lurking beneath the numerous assertions of individual and national confidence. Cormac McCarthy very much engages with the antinomies of this national allegory. His use of pastoral allegory comes in the form of a broken allegory: a strategy that is very much in keeping with Walter Benjamin's vision of allegorical fragmentation resulting from permanent historical crisis. This crisis, as McCarthy shows, reaches tipping-point in the modern era: the pastoral's dream of ‘pure-utility' is shown to be completely incompatible with the predominance of exchange value and commoditized social relations. The study is in four parts. The first section divides the first four novels in order to explore how they shatter the South's notion of uniqueness through a depiction of a desecrated pastoral. The second section considers the novel Blood Meridian on its own in order to demonstrate how the novel's absurdist renunciation of pastoral and the western mythos helps set up the late novels themes of generic and cultural termination. The third looks at the Border Trilogy, and discusses how recourse to the more open wildernesses of the south-west curiously introduces a countervailing theme of disenchantment and pastoral attenuation. The fourth and final section groups together No Country for Old Men and The Road, in order to argue that these late novels elicit a final rejection of pastoral as it collides headlong with the imaginary of late-capitalism.
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Intertextuality in the fiction of Cormac McCarthy /Burr, Benjamin J., January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Brigham Young University. Dept. of English, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 77-80).
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"Pain is always new" reading Cormac Mc Carthy's westernsAnders, Sabine January 2008 (has links)
Zugl.: Augsburg, Univ., Diss., 2008
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Huck Finn rides again reverberations of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn in the twentieth-century novels of Cormac McCarthy /Worthington, Leslie Harper, Hitchcock, Bert. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Auburn University, 2007. / Abstract. Vita. Includes bibliographic references.
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Operators at the borders the hero as change agent in border literature /Handelman, Jonathan Steven, January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Texas A & M University, 2003. / "May 2003." Title taken from PDF title screen (viewed October 22, 2007). Includes bibliographical references (p. 178-184).
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Cormac McCarthy's heroes narrative perspective and morality in the novels of Cormac McCarthy /Cooper, Lydia R. Fulton, Joe B., January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Baylor University, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 216-221)
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Overcoming the Regional Burden: History, Tradition, and Myth in the Novels of Cormac McCarthyWegner, John M. (John Michael) 08 1900 (has links)
In Overcoming the Regional Burden: History, Tradition, and Myth in the Novels of Cormac McCarthy, I contend that McCarthy's literary aesthetic develops and changes as he moves from Tennessee to Texas. McCarthy's conspicuous Southern and Southwestern regional affiliations have led critics to expect his works to recapitulate native history, traditions, and myths. Yet, McCarthy transcends provincial regionalism by challenging the creation of the regional and national myths we confuse with our actual histories and identities. McCarthy's fictions point away from accepted histories and point instead to figures marginalized by society and myth makers. These figures, according to McCarthy, are just as much a part of the creation of myth as those figures indelibly imprinted on our consciousness by
literary and historical tradition. My dissertation, in many respects, focuses on McCarthy's debunking of both literary and historical tradition, and his concomitant revitalization of American identity.
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Simultaneous diversity discontinuity, entanglement, and contemporary American fiction /Thurman, Alexander C., January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--New York University, Graduate School of Arts and Science, 2000. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 275-283).
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