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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.
21

Race and gender in the works of Maxine Hong Kingston, Alice Walker andToni Morrison

Hui, Fung-mei, Sandra., 許鳳薇. January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Literary and Cultural Studies / Master / Master of Arts
22

Representations of Chinese women in three modern literary texts

Yu, Siu-hung., 余小紅. January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / English Studies / Master / Master of Arts
23

The colonisation of the dark continent : metaphor and the politics of exclusion

Khanna, Ranjana January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
24

Characterization of Women in the Fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne

Estes, Emory Dolphous, Jr. 08 1900 (has links)
While his Transcendentalist contemporaries were expounding their optimistic philosophy of natural goodness, progress, and perfectibility, Hawthorne probed into the human heart, recording the darkest motives of his characters and writing bitter criticism of life. Around him men were declaring that scientific inventions, political organizations, and religious reforms were ushering in a new era; but Hawthorne viewed the new society as a probable continuation of old evils and a manufacturer of new ones. His fiction has been called "an elaborate study of the centrifugal, . . . a dramatization of all those social and psychological forces that lead to disunion, fragmentation, dispersion, incoherence. Critics generally comment on Hawthorne's obsession with guilt. His pessimistic analysis of the mind, his somber outlook on living, and his personal tendency to solitude are frequently credited to his Puritan ancestry; yet as Arvin points out, "He had no more Puritan blood than Emerson and hundreds of other New Englanders of his time: and who will say that they were obsessed with the spectral presence of guilty. One must go beyond Calvinist theology to comprehend the source of guilt that hovers over the pages of his fiction. His religious, moral, educational, and economic background was so typical of his time and locality that one can hardly believe that the nature of his writing or thinking could have been determined by these factors. Indeed, his imperviousness to contemporary influences causes one to look intensely at his personal life in searching for the explanation of the Hawthorne enigma. An important influence on his writing was his prolonged association with women. From his life in a feminine world and his reaction to that world, he devised the major part of his style, themes, and feminine character types. A review of the facts of his biography will establish the nature of the influence that dominated him as a man and as a writer. And an analysis of his fiction will indicate the extent of that influence on his writing. Although this study will necessarily begin with a review of his life, this thesis is not another biography; for Hawthorne already has a large number of biographers. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the literary influence of his mother, sisters, wife, daughters, and women acquaintances, with particular emphasis on their relation to his themes, style, and character types.
25

Shifting attitudes toward career women as shown in recent American fiction

Patten, Lucille Moore. January 1949 (has links)
LD2668 .T4 1949 P34 / Master of Science
26

The rhetoric of silence /

Church Farrell, Mary Joanne. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
27

Renascence the rebirth of Edna St. Vincent Millay and sentimentalism /

Wittenstein, Rebecca. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (B.A.)--Haverford College, Dept. of English, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references.
28

In the words of a woman

Rose, Kerin G. 26 June 1997 (has links)
I am a woman who writes. I am a writer who is a woman. In the Words of a Woman is an exploration of how these two facts of my life merge and influence each other. It is a work written to mediate between the supposed dichotomies of creative and critical, personal and academic, imaginative and scholarly. My desire is that this text will serve as autobiography, critical inquiry, creative response, and credo. The form of this thesis dances between prose and poetry. I have thoughts that need to be expressed sometimes in one form, sometimes in the other, and sometimes in the interplay of the two. As a collection of essays, I have brought together works that are primarily concerned with my story as a woman and a writer with essays that articulate my engagement in other women's writing. Within and between the prose pieces, I have included poems that touch on the same topics, giving different shadings to these themes. This text is a May Day dance, a joyous enactment of a performance long in the creating and rehearsing, not without struggles and challenges, but I hope for the reader a pleasure to participate in. / Graduation date: 1998
29

Women's handiwork dress culture, literacy, and social activism in British women's fiction, 1883--1900 (South Africa, Olive Schreiner, Ella Hepworth, Sarah Grand, Gertrude Dix, Margaret Oliphant) /

Kortsch, Christine Bayles. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis ()--University of Delaware, 2006. / Principal faculty advisors: Ann L. Ardis, Dept. of English and Margaret D. Stetz, Dept. of Women's Studies. Includes bibliographical references.
30

A fourth garden of self-awareness in the works of Jamaica Kincaid

D'Amore, Alice M. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Kutztown University of Pennsylvania, 2003. / Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 45-06, page: 2840. Typescript. Abstract precedes thesis as preliminary leaves 5-7. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 112-113).

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