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Allegorical I/lands : personal and national development in Caribbean autobiographical writing /Strongman, Roberto. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of California, San Diego, 2003. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 290-300).
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The anatomy of Charles Dickens: a study of bodily vulnerability in his novelsGavin, Adrienne Elizabeth 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the pervasive presence of the vulnerability of the human body in
Charles Dickens’s writing. It demonstrates, through a collection and discussion of bodily
references drawn from the range of Dickens’s novels, that the the body’s vulnerability is, in
conjunction with the use of humour and the literalizing of metaphorical references to the body,
a crucial and fundamental element of both Dickens’s distinctive style and of his enduring
literary popularity.
Chapter one provides evidence for the contention that a sense of physical vulnerability
was particularly intense in the Victorian era and that Dickens shared this awareness as his
social and humanitarian interests and activities illustrate. The following chapter focuses on
Dickens’s more private concerns with the body, particularly upon his personal physical fears
and experiences, the public attention given to his body as a result of fame, his continual denial
of his own physical frailties, and the interplay between his body and his writing all of which
provided impetus to his literature.
Chapters three, four, and five examine consecutively the ways in which physical
vulnerability—to damage, disease, and death, but most importantly to dismemberment—
function in the novels. They do so on three broad levels: Character, Conversation, and
Expression which depict in ascending order increasing bodily insecurity in Dickens’s texts.
The Character level concerns the bodily forms and fates of Dickens’s characters. We
see here that the more a player’s body is described the more vulnerable it will become, thus
good-hearted heroes are virtually “bodiless” and suffer little physical pain while evil
characters are described in great anatomical detail and come to bodily harm. Dickens metes
out “bodily justice” on this level in that he ensures that characters who have transgressed the rules of good conduct in his fictional world are physically punished for their misdeeds and
that bodily punishment is in direct proportion to the “crime” committed.
On the Conversational level Dickens depicts extreme physical horrors by expressing
these things humorously, by putting descriptions of them in mouths variously and
interestingly accented, and, most significantly, by playing on the dual literal and metaphorical
meanings of bodily references. Most of this anatomical dialogue is anecdotal and therefore
unverifiable, hypothetical and therefore unlikely to happen, or professional, i.e., spoken by
“bodily experts” such as doctors or undertakers, and therefore irrefutable. Here exaggeration
and extremes attract readers who are simultaneously fascinated and repelled by what
characters say of the body.
Dickens’s methods of Expression reflect physical reality—all bodies are vulnerable to
sudden damage just as Dickens can dismember a body suddenly either with the stroke of a
pen or by delaying its complete description. We see that on this level the body is at it most
vulnerable and is damaged by methods of expression rather than by narrative. Dickens here
plays most intensively with the literalization of metaphor, linguistically insisting that if a head
appears around a doorway we can no longer assume that a body will follow. The novels are
filled with dictionally decapitated heads and severed limbs, but through the use of humour and
by reanimating these members Dickens ensures that his style elicits not simply a reaction of
horror in his readers but elicits a response to the grotesque—a strong instinctual attraction to
his work which is rooted in the body, not in the intellect.
This dissertation concludes that the body’s vulnerability is not only a continual
presence in Dickens’s novels but is an under-examined yet fundamental element in what
makes his writing style distinctive and what makes his work continually popular.
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Le récit au fondement d'un moi entre modernité et postmodernité /Turcot, Marie-Pierre January 2002 (has links)
This thesis intends to describe the contemporary self as drawn by literary theory and writing practice. This objective implies defining the human being considering its history as well as studying its representation in narratives. / In order to circumscribe today's self, we undoubtedly have to study its historical evolution. Exploring the diametrically opposed conceptions suggested by modernity and postmodernity will lead us to a better understanding of the hybrid composition of the contemporary self, which is characterized by a search for coherence and meaning to a multidimensional and constantly evolving individual. / This definition, so far theoretical, will have to be confronted with the representations of the self found in autobiographies. The study of such self-narratives will provide the opportunity to observe in concrete terms the conception of the human being today. / The essential role of narratives will be identified beforehand. Narrative form certainly allows the representation of the self, but moreover it enters in the constitution and definition of the being itself. Self-narrative permits to establish the coherence of the self, hence it clearly appears at the basis of the identity. Overall, the narrative constitutes the foundation of the contemporary self amidst modernity and postmodernity.
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Vampires incorporated : self-definition in Anne Rice's Vampire chroniclesChandler, Anthony N. January 1997 (has links)
This thesis examines the use of orality as a means to self-definition in Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles. The main contention of this thesis is that within the Vampire Chronicles orality defines the self through incorporation, and that the bodily incorporation of food through a sexual consumption leads the vampire to naturally evolve a sense of who he or she is at any given moment in time. It is in this manner that this article discusses how the body, sexuality, food, and the possession of financial capital define and limit the individual's notion of self.
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Narrative, knowledge and personhood : stories of the self and Samuel Beckett's first-person proseBrown, Peter Robert, 1963- January 1998 (has links)
This dissertation offers both a theoretical investigation into the relationships between narrative, knowledge and personhood and a literary critical analysis of a group of Samuel Beckett's works in which narrative, knowledge and personhood are the central themes. / I present an account of the notion of narrative and explore the nature of justified narrative assertions. I then turn to skeptical and anti-realist arguments about the ability of narratives to represent truthfully the world. Such arguments are widespread in postmodernist and poststructuralist circles, and in order to evaluate them, I consider particular arguments of Jean-Francois Lyotard, Christopher Norris and Hayden White, all of whom question the ability of narratives to be true. The positions of these theorists rely upon deep conceptual confusion, and, after sorting out their claims, I conclude that they offer no compelling reasons to doubt that narratives can accurately and truthfully represent the world. / Next, I offer an analysis of the relationship between the notion of personhood and narrative. I argue against postmodernist and poststructuralist critiques of subjectivity, and, drawing on the work of various contemporary philosophers, I defend notions of subjectivity and selfhood while acknowledging and examining the essentially narrative nature of such phenomena. The concept of a "personal history" receives detailed analysis, as does the notion of a "situated self." While agreeing with particular criticisms of what is often called the "modern self," I argue that there are specific normative projects of modernity, namely autonomy and self-realization, that are worth preserving. / Finally, I explore the themes of narrative, knowledge and personhood in the nouvelles of Samuel Beckett. These works represent crises of narrative and personhood, and they depict the epistemic and ethical difficulties encountered by persons under conditions of modernity, conditions in which individual lives often lack narrative unity and meaning. I read Beckett as a critic of culture whose work, while deeply critical of certain trends in modern culture, points to the need for individual subjects to find true and meaningful narratives in which they can participate as co-authors.
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Complex unity "self" and deliberation in Homer's Odyssey and Iliad /Lebowitz, Willy. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (B.A.)--Haverford College, Dept. of Classics, 2008. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Conscious constructions of self dreams and visions in the Middle Ages /Lettau, Lisa. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Delaware, 2008. / Principal faculty advisors: James Dean and Mary Richards, Dept. of English. Includes bibliographical references.
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"Light is the left hand of darkness" : breaking away from invalid dichotomies in science fictionEjsmund, Arnika Nora. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.) (English))--University of Pretoria, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references.
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The mutual flame the quest for self-hood in relation to form in the later novels of D.H. Lawrence.Bhalla, Brij Mohan, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1971. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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Voice beyond self a theory and pedagogy of polyphonic expression in writing /Blankenship, Angella Sorokina. Getsi, Lucia Cordell. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Illinois State University, 1998. / Title from title page screen, viewed July 12, 2006. Dissertation Committee: Lucia C. Getsi (chair), James Elledge, William Woodson. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 196-200) and abstract. Also available in print.
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