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It's Alive! The Gothic (Dis)Embodiment of the Logic of NetworksBennion, Anna Katharine 04 December 2007 (has links) (PDF)
My thesis draws connections between today's network society and the workings of gothic literature in the late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century. Just as our society is formed and affected by the flow of information, the eighteenth-century culture of sensibility was formed by the merging and flow of scientific "technology" (or new scientific discoveries) and societal norms and rules. Gothic literature was born out of this science-society network, and in many ways embodies the ruptures implicit in it. Although gothic literature is not a network in the same sense as informationalism and the culture of sensibility are, gothic literature works according to the logic of networks on both a microscopic and macroscopic level. These correlations between networks and the gothic potentially illuminate two of gothic literature's strange and signature qualities: the subversive nature of the gothic convention, as well as the incredible—and almost inexplicable, considering its libeled and unpopular reputation—staying power of the genre. In Chapter One, I compare the society of informationalism and the eighteenth-century society of sensibility in order to extrapolate a three-pronged logic of networks: networks are subversive, networks are exclusive, and networks are based on codes. In Chapter Two I trace this logic through eighteenth-century gothic conventions as they are portrayed in Ann Radcliffe's The Italian and Matthew Lewis's The Monk. This shows how the gothic, like network society, depends on the paradox of containing the ideology that it subverts. In Chapter Three I investigate this paradox on a macroscopic level by examining the connections between "tales of terror" in Blackwood's Magazine and gothic literature in both the pre-Romantic and Victorian literature. By both adopting and subverting the conventions of Radcliffean gothic, these tales are a key node in the web of the gothic stretching backwards to into the eighteenth century, forwards into the nineteenth century, and beyond.
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The Master-Pupil Relationship in the novels of Charlotte BronteDrake, Pauline E. January 1959 (has links)
No description available.
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The Master-Pupil Relationship in the novels of Charlotte BronteDrake, Pauline E. January 1959 (has links)
No description available.
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An Appraisal of the MACSIM Simulation Routine In Its Application to an Alkylation PlantShaw, Ian Douglas 04 1900 (has links)
The legibility of the digitized copy is limited due to the quality of the original document. McMaster Digitization Centre. March 26, 2019. / The object of the program was to develop general guidelines for the art of simulation, and then to show how simulation could be used in practice. A digital computer simulation was assembled to describe the operation of the Shell alkylation plant at Bronte, Ontario. The solution of the steady-state mass and energy balances provided a working simulation on which to demonstrate the modeling and simulation techniques which are presented. The simulation was used to predict the operating costs and to asses the technical feasibility of five plant case studies. / Thesis / Master of Engineering (ME)
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Društvena uslovljenost psihološkog profila književnog lika u viktorijanskom i modernističkom romanuGojković Nataša 20 June 2016 (has links)
<p>Doktorska teza Društvena uslovljenost psihološkog profila književnog lika u viktorijanskom i modernističkom romanu, ima za cilj, pojednostavljeno rečeno, otkrivanje bliske povezanosti socioistorijskih prilika, složenih društvenih konvencija i krutih klasnih odnosa, sa privatnim i javnim bićem književnih likova u romanima iz pomenutih perioda. Kada kažemo „privatno“ i „javno“ biće, mislimo, pre svega, na najčešće presudne razlike među njima, te na lomove koje književni likovi trpe u nezaustavljivom procesu, u kojem bi jedno ili drugo trebalo da preovlada. Upravo ta stalna unutrašnja borba, izazvana spoljašnjim sukobima, u ovom istraživanju obezbeđuje rezultate, iako se za same protagoniste ona gotovo nikad ne završava. Opisujući društvene prilike i sistem vrednosti viktorijanskog doba, njihovo urušavanje do potpunog sloma, potom uzročno – posledične veze takvog sloma i moderne misli, te krize svih vrsta koje neminovno prate ovakve društvene procese, pokazaćemo svu ranjivost pojedinca, na primerima književnih likova iz romana Orkanski visovi, Neslavni Džud, Zaljubljene žene i Džejkobova soba. Orkanski visovi i Neslavni Džud povezuju se na planu borbe na život i smrt, borbe čiji ishod jeste i fizička smrt i smrt duše, ali i lekovitost teških iskustava koja uče praštanju, kompromisu i stvaralačkoj ljubavi. Džejkobova soba povezuje se sa Zaljubljenim ženama na nivou simbola, najočiglednija veza je sveprisutna smrt, ali i priroda koja deluje nezavisno od ljudi u oba romana, i sugeriše otklon koji su ljudi mehaničkog sveta napravili prema njoj. Mehanika ljudskog bivstvovanja uzrokovana i društvenim uslovima, dovešće do ratnog sukoba koji se kod Lorensa ne pominje eksplicitno, ali je prisutan u teskobnom osećanju kraja i uništenja, dok se na kraju Džejkobove sobe ova prigušenost i razobličava u smrti glavnog lika i zvucima oružane paljbe. U krajnjem ishodu, ova disertacija pokazuje da društveni uslovi, konvencije, predodređenosti, deluju unisono, zahtevi su im jednaki, a da obrađeni književni likovi reaguju slično, uprkos različitim miljeima u koje su smešteni, te da različite sudbine, pa i različite reakcije, upravo pojačavaju sličnosti, čak i istovetnosti ishoda.</p>
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The adorned and the adored : issues of sympathy and ownership in Victorian literatureSchmuhl, Emily J. 20 June 2014 (has links)
This thesis is comprised of two articles that examine sympathy, material culture, and ownership in Victorian literature. In the first article, I explore the figure of the heiress in the Victorian literary tradition, focusing on Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and Charles Dickens's Great Expectations. George Eliot marked the heiress figure as unsympathetic, no matter her incarnation: whether the moralist of popular fiction or madwoman of gothic fiction, she is representative of excess and indulgence—ideas that society wanted to condemn in harmony with Georges Batailles's observation that a time of indulgence will be checked by a return to conservative bourgeois ideals. The heiress is made a vessel for these cultural anxieties, representing both the desire for and reaction against material possession within the larger male imperial imaginary landscape. The heiress is a way for the male protagonist to indulge in a decadent coming-of-age narrative before being scalded by his secular desires, abandoning this dream for bourgeois security. I employ the criticism of Batailles, Laura Brown, Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar, etc., in order to discover how the heiress is objectified and controlled, yet, in the greater narrative structure, finds ways to act outside of the male linguistic system as an agent for change—bringing about the collapse of the fake set and props of the material world. In the second article, I examine Charles Dickens's attempts to control his printed materials and his belief that he could coalesce the expanding literate public into a faithful readership. However, Dickens was troubled by illicit reproductions of his work by the popular presses. In order to look at Dickens's concerns not only over losing control of his product, but also having the emotional essence of his characters and stories compromised, I turn to Bleak House which, critics have established, is in part a treatise against unlicensed copies. I argue that the character of Lady Dedlock serves as a representation of Dickens since she, like him, relies on the popular press in order to maintain her social standing, yet she also imagines that she is above them—though, in reality, much of her "private" life is already in public hands. I focus, specifically, on an unlicensed image of Lady Dedlock (that she is unaware of) that has been reproduced in a collection that anyone can purchase. In the end, Dickens allows his fiction to speak for him, forcing the reader to process the invasive horror of unlicensed copies through the emotion they feel for the actual, authentic woman. / Graduation date: 2012 / Access restricted to the OSU Community at author's request from June 20, 2012 - June 20, 2014
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"<i>My own still shadow-world</i>" : melancholy and feminine intermediacy in Charlotte Brontë's <i>Villette</i>Machuca, Daniela 10 July 2007
Lucy Snowe, the heroine of <i>Villette</i>, Charlotte Brontës final novel, is in constant conflict with the dichotomies of patriarchal culture. As she is perpetually torn between the opposing forces of patriarchy, Lucy Snowe inhabits what she calls her own <i>still shadow-world</i> (Brontë164). This thesis explains the nature of the intermediate space Lucy Snowe occupies and examines its repercussions on her mental state. Chapter One theorizes the effect of patriarchal dichotomies on Lucy Snowe to demonstrate that her mental conflict has its roots in the female experience of the opposition between nature and culture. Chapter Twos analysis of the nineteenth-century medical understanding of madness shows that Lucy Snowes melancholy is a symptom of the intermediacy created by conflicting patriarchal expectations. Chapter Three compares Lucy Snowe to the female figure in patriarchal master narratives, which draws attention to the serious consequences of patriarchal culture on women and demonstrates that Lucy is representative of women in conflict with patriarchal expectations. Ultimately, as part of Charlotte Brontës endeavor to represent truth rather than reality, Villette challenges patriarchal expectations of women and presents a different vision of womanhood.
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By her Own Hand: Female Agency through Self-Castration in Nineteenth-Century British FictionHall-Godsey, Angela Marie 20 November 2008 (has links)
By Her Own Hand: Female Agency Through Self-Castration in Nineteenth-Century British Fiction explores the intentional methods of self-castration that lead to authorial empowerment. The project relies on the following self-castration formula: the author’s recognition of herself as a being defined by lack. This lack refers to the inability to signify within the phallocentric system of language. In addition to this initial recognition, the female author realizes writing for public consumption emulates the process of castration but, nevertheless, initiates the writing process as a way to resituate the origin of castration—placing it in her own hand. The female writer also recognizes her production as feminine and, therefore works to castrate her own femininity in her pursuit to create texts that are liberated from the critical assignation of “feminine productions.” Female self-castration is a violent act of displacement. As the author gains empowerment through the writing process, she creates characters that bear the mark of castration. The text opens a field of play in which the author utilizes the page as a way to cut, disfigure, or erase the feminine sexual body. On the authorial level, the feminine writer works through her self-castration process through the process of writing, editing, and publication. Within the text, her characters demonstrate a will toward liberation from authorial productive hegemony by carrying the mark of their creator’s castration and by taking on the power the process allocates to the writer.
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"<i>My own still shadow-world</i>" : melancholy and feminine intermediacy in Charlotte Brontë's <i>Villette</i>Machuca, Daniela 10 July 2007 (has links)
Lucy Snowe, the heroine of <i>Villette</i>, Charlotte Brontës final novel, is in constant conflict with the dichotomies of patriarchal culture. As she is perpetually torn between the opposing forces of patriarchy, Lucy Snowe inhabits what she calls her own <i>still shadow-world</i> (Brontë164). This thesis explains the nature of the intermediate space Lucy Snowe occupies and examines its repercussions on her mental state. Chapter One theorizes the effect of patriarchal dichotomies on Lucy Snowe to demonstrate that her mental conflict has its roots in the female experience of the opposition between nature and culture. Chapter Twos analysis of the nineteenth-century medical understanding of madness shows that Lucy Snowes melancholy is a symptom of the intermediacy created by conflicting patriarchal expectations. Chapter Three compares Lucy Snowe to the female figure in patriarchal master narratives, which draws attention to the serious consequences of patriarchal culture on women and demonstrates that Lucy is representative of women in conflict with patriarchal expectations. Ultimately, as part of Charlotte Brontës endeavor to represent truth rather than reality, Villette challenges patriarchal expectations of women and presents a different vision of womanhood.
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Patriarchal structures of control and female homosocial relationships in the novels of Charlotte BrontëEllis, Jeanne 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2001. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: In Charlotte Bronte's novels, the importance accorded to female homosocial
relationships - such as friendship and the mother-daughter relationship -
challenges the conventional structure of the Victorian realist novel, in which the
focus of the female protagonist's development is almost exclusively on the
eventual achievement of heterosexual marriage Structurally. heterosexual
marriage at closure re-establishes the status quo that has been threatened or
destabilised during the unfolding of the plot. Yet what Bronte's novels reveal,
is that the status quo thus re-established also confirms patriarchy as a system
in which the bonds between men are consolidated to maintain social, political
and economic power as a male prerogative By contrast, the ideology that
promotes marriage as the sine qua non of women's existence positions women
as rivals and the representation of female homosocial relationships in the
nineteenth-century novel is either relegated to the margins of the text or erased
entirely. In Bronte's novels, the structural relationship between this
conventional displacement of female homosocial relationships and the silencing
and containment of female desire in heterosexual marriage at closure is
consistently explored and subverted.
In an increasingly complex process of rewriting the Victorian novel from
a female perspective, Bronte's novels construct alternative plots that privilege
the representation of female homosocial relationships even as they imitate
conventional plot structure In so doing. the gendering of narrative voice as
female lays claim to a female discourse of desire. which is rooted in female
homosociality and inclusive of lesbian desire. Compulsory (female)
heterosexuality which is exclusively domestic and maternal. IS therefore
challenged by an alternative representation of female desire as defiant of the
ngid categories Imposed by heterosexuality. because it is fiurd and multiple in
Its expression
This thesis explores the process of recuperation through which Bronte
both places the representation of female hornosocial relationships at the centre
of her novels and reveals patriarchal structures of control at work / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In die romans van Charlotte Bronte konfronteer the sentraliteit van vroulike
homososiale verhoudings - soos vriendskap en die moeder-dogter verhouding
- die konvensionele struktuur van die Victoriaanse realistiese roman. Volgens
hierdie konvensionele struktuur is die fokus van die vroulike protagonis se
ontwikkeling bykans uitsluitlik gerig op haar uiteindelike toetrede tot 'n
heteroseksuele huwelik. Struktureel gesproke herstel die heteroseksuele
huwelik by die sluiting van die roman die status quo wat bedreig of
gedestabiliseer is gedurende die ontplooing van die roman. Wat Bronte se
romans egter aan die lig bring, is dat die status quo wat so herstel word, ook
die patriargale sisteem bevestig - waarbinne die bande tussen mans
gekonsolideer word ten einde sosiale politieke en ekonomiese mag as 'n
manlike prerogatief te waarborg Die ideologie wat die huwelik voorhou as die
sine qua non van die vrou se bestaan posisioneer vroue as mededingers, en
hierdeur word die uitbeelding van vroulike homososiale verhoudings in die
negentiende-eeuse roman verskuif na die buitewyke van die teks, of word dit
algeheel uitgewis. In Bronte se romans word die strukturele verwantskap
tussen hierdie konvensionele verplasing van vroulike homososiale verhoudings
en die demping of beheer van vroulike begeerte in die heteroseksuele huwelik
voortdurend in die roman se sluiting ondersoek en ondermyn
In 'n proses wat 'n toenemend ingewikkelde herskrywing van die
Victonaanse roman vanuit 'n vroulike qesiqspunt inhou. stel Bronte se romans
alternatiewc verwikkelinqsplanne saam wat voorrang gee aan die uitbeelding
van vroulike hornososiale verhoudings terwyl hierdie storieplanne
konvensionele struktuurplanne naboots. Ole manier waarop die verteller se
stem so vervroulik word gee uiting aan 'n vroulike diskoers van begeerte wat
gewortel IS In vroulike hornososialiteit en wat lesbiese begeerte insluit
Verpliqte (vroullke) heteroseksualiteit. wat uitsluitlik huislik en moederlik IS,
word dus gekonfronteer deur 'n alternatiewe uitbeeldinq van vroulike begeerte
wat die rigiede kateqoriee opqele deur heteroseksualiteit verwerp en meer
vloeibare en veelsoortiqe vorme van ultdrukklng daarstel
Hierdie tests ondersoek die herstellinqsprcses waardeur Bronte die
uitbeeldinq van vroulike hornososiale verhoudinqs sentraal plaas In haar romans, terwyl sy terselfdertyd die werkswyses van patriargale beheerstrukture
aan die lig bring.
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