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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.
31

Gothic Elements in Selected Fictional Works by Nathaniel Hawthorne

Francis, Kurt T. 08 1900 (has links)
Gothicism is the primary feature of Nathaniel Hawthorne's fiction, and it is his skill in elevating Gothicism to the level of high art which makes him a great artist. Gothic elements are divided into six categories: Objects, Beings, Mental States, Practices and Actions, Architecture and Places, and Nature. Some devices from these six categories are documented in three of Hawthorne's stories ("Young Goodman Brown," "The Minister's Black Veil," and "Ethan Brown") and three of his romances (The Scarlet Letter, The House of the Seven Gables, and The Marble Faun). The identification of 142 instances of Hawthorne's use of Gothic elements in the above works demonstrates that Hawthorne is fundamentally a Gothic writer.
32

Nathaniel Hawthorne's Sketches: Definition, Classification, and Analysis

Kelly, Kathleen O. 05 1900 (has links)
Nathaniel Hawthorne's sketches, as distinguished from his tales, fall into three main types: the essay-sketch, the sketch-proper, and the vignette-sketch. A definition of these works includes a brief discussion of their inception, source, and development, and a study of the individual pieces as representative of types within each of the three main divisions. A consideration of the sketches from their inception through their final form reveals a great deal of the formative process of some of Hawthorne's ideas of literature and of the development of specific techniques to cope with his themes. A study of the sketches as a group and individually provides a clearer basis for a study of Hawthorne's other works.
33

Creating "Concord:" making a literary tourist town, 1825 -1910

Martin, Kristi Lynn 15 April 2019 (has links)
This dissertation examines how Concord, Massachusetts became a heritage town in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Concord-based authors (including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry David Thoreau, and Louisa May Alcott) at once contributed to Concord’s attractiveness as a location and took advantage of the growing reputation and popularity of the town as a tourist site. Their writings, rooted in Concord, drew attention to the town and to themselves as authors within it, while also elevating the stature of American literature. Linking literature and site-building, Concordians encouraged contemporaneous sightseeing in a curated landscape. This sets the origins of tourism and site-building in Concord earlier than standard academic narratives of Progressive Era preservation in New England. The primary contribution of this interdisciplinary study is to trace the ways in which collective memory was fashioned for an audience of literary “arm-chair travellers” and then employed to endow private houses with literary and historical importance to national heritage, as public locations to be visited and preserved in Concord’s landscape. This work traces the development of spiritualized “places” in Concord from Revolutionary War monument-building to Emerson’s literary community investing the landscape with poetic associations, Hawthorne’s engagement of tourism as an appeal to readers, and George William Curtis’s efforts to market Concord as a national literary retreat. It further examines Thoreau’s literary career in relation to his interest in local history, tourism, and museum-building in his hometown. Finally, the popularity of Alcott’s Little Women boosted tourism in Concord, and the increase of visitors coincided with projects to memorialize Thoreau, Hawthorne, and the Transcendentalist movement in the landscape. These efforts culminated in the development of guide books and organized tours for visitors, and the emergence of a local souvenir industry. The study concludes with the institutionalization of historic house museums in the early twentieth century.
34

L’émergence d’un discours féministe dans la fiction courte de Nathaniel Hawthorne (1832-1844) : l’écriture du devenir-femme / The emergence of a feminist speech in the short fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne (1832-1844 ) : the writing of woman-becoming

Sahmadi, Linda 04 December 2015 (has links)
L’élaboration de portraits féminins reflète la fascination de Hawthorne pour cette créature complexe, un attrait nourri par l’omniprésence des femmes dans son entourage. L’influence de ces dernières est indéniable, et semble être à l’origine du féminisme ambigu de l’écrivain, partagé entre, d’un côté, l’héritage puritain des Manning et Hawthorne, et, de l’autre, les convictions féministes émergentes de sa belle-famille, les Peabody. Les portraits de femmes de la fiction hawthornienne se caractérisent donc par un binarisme essentialisme-différentialisme qui émane de la vision étroite des protagonistes masculins, et que l’auteur tente de dépasser. Les concepts deleuziens du « mineur » et du « devenir-femme » nous seront d’une grande utilité pour comprendre comment la femme essentialisée des Puritains, ce que nous pouvons aussi appeler la femme-image, au sens lacanien du terme, est en réalité une femme minorée car amputée de son esprit et de son rôle social. Hawthorne témoigne ainsi d’un féminisme équivoque, une voix qu’il a du mal, par moments, à assumer et affirmer complètement. / Female portraits are abundant in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s fiction, short stories and novels alike. The influence of the women evolving in his private sphere may be at the origin of his ambiguous feminist vision, as his allegiance was divided between his Puritan inheritance (both the Mannings and the Hawthornes) on the one hand, and, on the other, the emerging feminist convictions of his in-laws (the Peabodys). Hawthorne’s female portraits are thus characterized by a tendency to binarism as they pit an essentialist view of women against a differentialist one. This binarist perspective reflects the narrow-mindedness of the patriarcal system which the male heroes try to defend and maintain. Deleuze and Guatarri’s concepts of “minor literature” and “becoming-woman” will help us understand how the woman-image of the Puritans is a minored woman in the realm both of the social order and the symbolic order. Hawthorne’s feminist voice is an equivocal one as his text is undergoing a subterranean process of “becoming-woman.”
35

Hawthorne's Coverdale: Lost in a Hall of Mirrors

Morgan, Sarah June 08 1900 (has links)
Nathaniel Hawthorne uses Miles Coverdale to depict the process by which an individual reconstructs past experience into an emotionally and intellectually acceptable form. Through Coverdale's narrative, Hawthorne illustrates that truth is at best an approximation, that the transformational effects of time and distance obscure one's memory of remembered events, thus making absolute truth impossible to discover. As Coverdale attempts to understand his past--reordering, reassessing, and assigning it significance--a subjective interpretation of his past experience evolves. It iLs Coverdale's subjective interpretation of experience which Hawthorne presents in The Blithedale Romance; the ambiguity and mystery of Coverdale's narrativeare necessary to the design of the romance, for both elements characterize the area between truth and imagination in which experience is perceived and interpreted.
36

The Function of the Pivot in the Fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne

Ricco, Paula Traynham 05 1900 (has links)
In traditional romance, the hero takes a mythical journey into the underworld where he meets and overcomes evil antagonists. Hawthorne has transferred much of that hero's role to a pivotal character whose paradoxical function is to cause the central conflict in the tale or novel while remaining almost entirely passive himself. The movement of the tale or novel depends on the pivot's humanization, that is, his return to and integration within society. Works treated are "Alice Doane's Appeal," "Peter Goldthwaite's Treasure," "Roger Malvin's Burial," "Rappaccini' s Daughter," "Lady Eleanore's Mantle," "The Minister's Black Veil," "The Antique Ring," "The Gentle Boy," Fanshawe, The Scarlet Letter, The House of the Seven Gables, The Blithedale Romance, and The Marble Faun.
37

Maurice Maeterlinck and Pelléas et Mélisande, Nathaniel Hawthorne and The Scarlet Letter: A Comparative Study

Elliott, Linda Louise 12 1900 (has links)
This study shows similarities in the attitudes of and literary influences upon Maurice Maeterlinck and Nathaniel Hawthorne, especially in Maeterlinck's drama Pelleas et Melisande and Hawthorne's novel The Scarlet Letter. Circumstantial evidence indicates Maeterlinck's familiarity with Hawthorne's novel. Since no previous comparative study of Pelleas et Melisande and The Scarlet Letter exists, the works themselves are the major sources of information.
38

O mito do duplo em retratos / The myth of the double in pictures

Cesaro, Patrícia Souza Silva 14 December 2012 (has links)
Submitted by Erika Demachki (erikademachki@gmail.com) on 2014-09-26T20:27:29Z No. of bitstreams: 2 Cesaro, Patrícia Souza Silva-2012-dissertação.pdf: 2464854 bytes, checksum: 532712a329cd48a09f59cb655120e2a6 (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Jaqueline Silva (jtas29@gmail.com) on 2014-09-26T21:15:48Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 2 Cesaro, Patrícia Souza Silva-2012-dissertação.pdf: 2464854 bytes, checksum: 532712a329cd48a09f59cb655120e2a6 (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2014-09-26T21:15:48Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 Cesaro, Patrícia Souza Silva-2012-dissertação.pdf: 2464854 bytes, checksum: 532712a329cd48a09f59cb655120e2a6 (MD5) license_rdf: 23148 bytes, checksum: 9da0b6dfac957114c6a7714714b86306 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012-12-14 / The myth of the double is part of a set of the most antique human myths which permeate man`s imaginary since his own existence. It has as its main manifestations the cases of persons resembling one another, identical twins, the fact that someone sees himself in another one, the duality. The term used to designate the double, coined by German writer Jean-Paul Richter, is doppelgänger, and it means the one who walks by the side or close by, the travelling companion or fellow traveler. It has to do with one‘s experience of him/her in alterity or otherness. Some examples of occurrences of the myth of the double in literatures can be, among other: Shakespeare‘s A Comedy of Errors, Plato`s The Banquet, Robert Louis Stevenson‘s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Mary Shelley‘s Frankenstein, Dostoyevsky‘s The Double. This thesis has as the object of its analysis the recurrence (and reoccurrence) of the myth of the double in literature and in order to do that it concentrates on the examination of four works which are similar through the manifestation of the double in portraits. Three of them are short stories and the last one is a novel: Nathaniel Hawthorne‘s ―The Prophetic Pictures,‖ Edgar Allan Poe‘s ―The Oval Portrait,‖ Nikolai Gogol‘s ―The Portrait [Портрет],‖ and Oscar Wilde‘s The Picture of Dorian Gray. The theoretical support for the thesis concentrates on a larger use or presence of the idea of the double, as in the Romanticism, and in the development of some themes dear to the 19th Century, such as the fragmentation of the self, the new notions of myth, the idea of the double and specifically the myth of the double. The main theoreticians or theorists used where, among others, are Sigmund Freud, Otto Rank, Arnold Hauser, Anatol Rosenfeld, J. Guinsburg, and Jean-Pierre Vernant. / O mito do duplo faz parte de um conjunto de mitos dos mais antigos, que permeiam o imaginário do homem desde a sua própria existência. Tem por principais manifestações os casos de sósias, gêmeos idênticos, o ver a si mesmo em outro, a dualidade. O termo consagrado para designar o duplo, cunhado pelo escritor alemão Jean-Paul Richter, é doppelgänger, e significa aquele que caminha ao lado, o companheiro de estrada. Tem a ver com uma experiência de si na alteridade. Alguns exemplos de recorrência ao mito do duplo na literatura, entre outros, podem ser: A comédia dos erros, de Shakespeare, O banquete, de Platão, O médico e o monstro, de Stevenson, Frankenstein, de Mary Shelley, O duplo, de Dostoiévski. Esta dissertação tem o objetivo estudar a recorrência do mito do duplo na literatura e, para isso, foram selecionadas quatro obras, que se assemelham pela manifestação do duplo em retratos. São três contos e um romance: ―Os retratos proféticos‖, de Nathaniel Hawthorne, ―O retrato oval‖, de Edgar Allan Poe, ―O retrato‖, de Nikolai Gogol, e O retrato de Dorian Gray, de Oscar Wilde. O suporte teórico da dissertação se concentra no maior uso ou presença da ideia do duplo, como no Romantismo e no desenvolvimento de temas caros ao século XIX, como a fragmentação do sujeito, as novas noções de mito, de duplo e especificamente do mito do duplo. Os principais teóricos são, entre outros, Sigmund Freud, Otto Rank, Arnold Hauser, Anatol Rosenfeld, J. Guinsburg, Jean-Pierre Vernant.
39

Hawthorne's Transcendental Ambivalence in Mosses from an Old Manse

Eisenman, Matthew S 11 August 2011 (has links)
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s collection of short stories, Mosses from an Old Manse, serves as his contribution to the philosophical discussions on Transcendentalism in Concord, MA in the early 1840s. While Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and the other individuals involved in the Transcendental club often seem to readily accept the positions presented in Emerson’s work, it is never so simple for Hawthorne. Repeatedly, Hawthorne’s stories demonstrate his difficulty in trying to identify his own opinion on the subject. Though Hawthorne seems to want to believe in the optimistic potential of the spiritual and intellectual ideal presented in Emersonian Transcendentalism, he consistently dwells on the evil and blackness that may be contained in the human heart. The collection of short stories written while Hawthorne lived in Concord and surrounded himself with those dominant literary figures represents the clearest articulation of his ambivalent position on Transcendentalism.
40

Counter-monumentalism in the Search for American Identity in Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter & The Marble Faun

Mise, Carmen 30 June 2015 (has links)
This study examines the crisis of identity the United States was experiencing in the nineteenth-century through two of the major literary works of Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter and The Marble Faun. Hawthorne, who lived through this crucial and important developmental period, was concerned as to what this identity would be, how the United States would shape and define itself, and what its future would be if this identity was malformed. In addition, this study will look at counter-monuments as argued by James E. Young in his essay “The Counter-Monument: Memory against Itself in Germany Today” to expand on these issues of identity. If according to Young, the ideal goal of the counter-monument is “not to remain fixed but to change,” one can conclude that Hawthorne understood that national identity must be fluid; otherwise, the nation would crumble under the pressure and force of change.

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