Table of Contents

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS Volume One Publisher’sNote................................v AftertheFall..................................31 Preface to the Original Edition ....................vii After the Fire, a Still Small Voice ..................32 ContributingReviewers..........................ix Afternoon Men ................................33 Key to Pronunciation ...........................lvii The Afternoon of a Faun .........................34 AgainsttheDay................................34 Aaron’sRod...................................1 AgainsttheGrain...............................35 TheAbbéConstantin.............................1 TheAgeofInnocence...........................36 The Abbess of Crewe: A Modern Morality Tale ........2 The Age of Wonders ............................37 The Abduction..................................2 AgentsandPatients.............................38 AbeLincolninIllinois............................3 AgnesGrey...................................38 AbelSánchez...................................4 The Agony and the Ecstasy: A Novel of Michelangelo . 39 AbrahamandIsaac..............................5 L’Aiglon.....................................40 Absalom,Absalom!..............................5 Ajax.........................................40 Absalom and Achitophel ..........................6 Alburquerque..................................41 TheAbsentee...................................7 Alcestis......................................42 Absurd Person Singular...........................7 TheAlchemist.................................43 TheAbyss.....................................8 AleckMaury,Sportsman.........................44 TheAccident...................................9 TheAlexandriaQuartet..........................44 AccidentalDeathofanAnarchist..................10 AliasGrace...................................47 TheAccidentalTourist...........................11 AliceAdams..................................48 TheAcharnians................................12 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland .................49 TheAcolyte...................................12 All-BrightCourt...............................50 AcquaintedwithGrief...........................13 AllFallDown.................................50 Across.......................................13 AllFools.....................................51 AcrosstheRiverandintotheTrees.................14 AllforLove:Or,TheWorldWellLost..............52 AdaorArdor:AFamilyChronicle.................15 All God’s Chillun Got Wings .....................53 AdamBede...................................16 AllGreenShallPerish...........................53 TheAddingMachine............................17 AllHallows’Eve...............................54 TheAdmirableCrichton.........................18 AllMenAreBrothers...........................55 Adolphe......................................19 AllMenAreEnemies...........................55 TheAdventuresofAugieMarch...................19 AllMySons..................................57 TheAdventuresofHajjiBabaofIspahan............20 AllOurYesterdays.............................58 AdventuresofHuckleberryFinn...................21 AllQuietontheWesternFront....................59 TheAdventuresofPeregrinePickle................22 AllThatFall:APlayforRadio....................59 The Adventures of Roderick Random ...............23 AlltheKing’sMen.............................60 TheAdventuresofTomSawyer...................25 AllthePrettyHorses............................61 TheAdventurousSimplicissimus..................25 All’sWellThatEndsWell........................61 Aeneid.......................................26 AlmanacoftheDead............................62 TheAerodrome:ALoveStory....................27 Almayer’sFolly:AStoryofanEasternRiver.........63 Aesop’sFables.................................28 Alnilam......................................63 The Affected Young Ladies .......................29 AltonLocke:TailorandPoet......................64 AfterManyaSummerDiestheSwan...............29 Amadeus.....................................65 After the Banquet ..............................31 AmadísofGaul................................65 xix Cyclopedia of Literary Characters TheAmazingAdventuresofKavalier&Clay.........66 TheAntiquary................................106 TheAmbassadors..............................67 AntonyandCleopatra..........................107 Ambiguous Adventure...........................68 AnywherebutHere............................109 Amelia.......................................69 TheApesofGod..............................109 AmericaHurrah................................70 TheApostle..................................111 AmericanBuffalo..............................71 AppalacheeRed...............................112 AnAmericanDream............................71 TheAppleintheDark..........................113 TheAmericanDream...........................72 TheAppleoftheEye...........................113 AmericanPastoral..............................73 Appointment in Samarra ........................114 AnAmericanTragedy...........................74 The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz ..............114 TheAmerican.................................75 TheArabianNights’Entertainments:Selections......115 Amerika......................................76 TheArbitration...............................116 AmongWomenOnly............................76 Arcadia(Sidney)..............................116 Amores......................................77 Arcadia (Stoppard) ............................118 Amphitryon...................................78 TheArchitectandtheEmperorofAssyria...........119 Amphitryon38................................78 Argenis.....................................120 Amsterdam...................................79 DerarmeHeinrich.............................121 Anabasis.....................................80 The Armies of the Night: History as a Novel, Anancy’sScore................................81 theNovelasHistory.........................121 TheAnatomyLesson............................81 ArmsandtheMan:AnAnti-RomanticComedy......122 TheAncientChild..............................82 Arne.......................................122 AndQuietFlowstheDon........................83 Around the World in Eighty Days .................123 Andorra......................................84 ArrowofGod................................124 Andria.......................................84 Arrowsmith..................................125 Andromache(Racine)...........................85 ArsenicandOldLace..........................126 Andromache(Euripides).........................86 Art.........................................127 TheAndromedaStrain...........................87 Artamenes:TheGrandCyrus....................127 ÁngelGuerra..................................88 The Artamonov Business........................128 AngelPavement...............................88 Arturo’sIsland................................128 AngelsFall...................................89 AsaManGrowsOlder.........................129 Angels in America: A Gay Fantasia on National Themes. 90 AsforMeandMyHouse.......................130 AngelsonToast................................91 AsILayDying...............................131 AngleofRepose...............................92 AstheCrowFlies:ALyricPlayfortheAir..........131 Anglo-Saxon Attitudes ..........................93 AsYouLikeIt................................132 Anil’sGhost..................................93 Ashes.......................................133 AnimalDreams................................94 Ashes and Diamonds ...........................134 AnimalFarm..................................95 TheAsiatics..................................135 AnnaChristie.................................96 TheAspernPapers.............................136 AnnaintheTropics.............................96 TheAssistant.................................136 AnnaKarenina................................97 L’Assommoir.................................137 AnnaoftheFiveTowns..........................98 Astrophel and Stella............................138 Annals of the Parish: Or, The Chronicle of Dalmailing . 99 Asya.......................................138 Anne of the Thousand Days ......................99 AtPlayintheFieldsoftheLord..................139 AnnieJohn..................................100 AtSwim-Two-Birds...........................140 Anniversaries:FromtheLifeofGesineCresspahl.....100 At the Sign of the Reine Pédauque ................141 Another Country ..............................102 AtWeddingsandWakes........................142 AnotherLife.................................103 Atala.......................................142 Anthony Adverse..............................104 AtalantainCalydon............................143 Antigone (Anouilh) ............................105 Atlas Shrugged ...............................143 Antigone (Sophocles) ..........................106 Attachments..................................144 xx Table of Contents AucassinandNicolette.........................145 TheBarracksThief............................188 August 1914 .................................145 TheBarracks.................................189 August: Osage County..........................147 Barren Ground................................190 AuntDanandLemon..........................148 BarrioBoy...................................190 AuntJuliaandtheScriptwriter...................149 Barry Lyndon: The Story of a Boy’s Acculturation ....191 TheAunt’sStory..............................149
Recommended publications
  • The Wooster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1974-04-26
    The College of Wooster Open Works The oV ice: 1971-1980 "The oV ice" Student Newspaper Collection 4-26-1974 The oW oster Voice (Wooster, OH), 1974-04-26 Wooster Voice Editors Follow this and additional works at: https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1971-1980 Recommended Citation Editors, Wooster Voice, "The oosW ter Voice (Wooster, OH), 1974-04-26" (1974). The Voice: 1971-1980. 90. https://openworks.wooster.edu/voice1971-1980/90 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the "The oV ice" Student Newspaper Collection at Open Works, a service of The oC llege of Wooster Libraries. It has been accepted for inclusion in The oV ice: 1971-1980 by an authorized administrator of Open Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. I csi-..- r 7V7 . tm ill Wayne County3 Virtu can ba fun. I J: Richard T. Gore I PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF THE COLLEGE OF WOOSTER .VOLUME LXXXIX Wooster, Ohio, Friday, April 26, 1974 Number 21 ' 1 Douglass to go co-ed c ; with humanities program '. By BUI Henley performers In the arts and for Current Events Committee and "persons who have, a strong In- others. ' Douglass Hall, used primarily terest In a philosophical, theo The proposal notes that "we ' n as a freshman men's dorm since logical, historical or aesthetic feel it would be wrong to limit Its construction In 1929, will be-- approach to humane and artis- participation in our program, - come a co--ed humanities tic problems". to people of only one sex." Dr. , 9 program house next year.
    [Show full text]
  • FALLEN MASTERS by MAURIE ALIOFF by Exorcist—Mania, the Wicker Man Tanked at the Box Office
    The Cinar story began with a horror movie. Soon after meeting for the first time in New Orleans in the early 1970s, company founders Micheline Charest and Ron Weinberg happened to see the now legendary British picture, The Wicker Man. Impressed by the film's strange power, the two movie lovers also saw an opportunity in it. Written by Anthony Shaffer (Sleuth, Frenzy), and directed by one—shot wonder Robin Hardy, The Wicker Man cooks up a delirious alternate reality that feels like it was made under the influence of a witch's spell. The story focuses on a police investigator (Edward Woodward), who travels to a remote Scottish island where he discovers that the local people, among them an aris- tocrat played by Christopher Lee, are devo- tees of a neo—pagan cult. The oddly named Sergeant Howie, a strictly orthodox Christian who intends to remain a virgin until his wedding night, is horrified by the island's un—Christian hedonism. Released in England on a double bill with Nicolas Roeg's Don't Look Now, and swamped FALLEN MASTERS BY MAURIE ALIOFF by Exorcist—mania, The Wicker Man tanked at the box office. Charest and Weinberg picked up the rights from Warner Bros., stashed a print in their car trunk and travelled the midnight—movie circuit. The Quebecoise (Charest) and the New Yorker (Weinberg) helped turn a unique film into a cult item and for their efforts netted about $250,000. Ironically, the couple's even- tual rise and fall, from hugely successful producers and distributors of wholesome children's shows to industry outcasts accused of fraud, originated with a story about moral righteousness destroyed by amoral devotion to the material world.
    [Show full text]
  • X********X************************************************** * Reproductions Supplied by EDRS Are the Best That Can Be Made * from the Original Document
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 302 264 IR 052 601 AUTHOR Buckingham, Betty Jo, Ed. TITLE Iowa and Some Iowans. A Bibliography for Schools and Libraries. Third Edition. INSTITUTION Iowa State Dept. of Education, Des Moines. PUB DATE 88 NOTE 312p.; Fcr a supplement to the second edition, see ED 227 842. PUB TYPE Reference Materials Bibliographies (131) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC13 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Annotated Bibllographies; *Authors; Books; Directories; Elementary Secondary Education; Fiction; History Instruction; Learning Resources Centers; *Local Color Writing; *Local History; Media Specialists; Nonfiction; School Libraries; *State History; United States History; United States Literature IDENTIFIERS *Iowa ABSTRACT Prepared primarily by the Iowa State Department of Education, this annotated bibliography of materials by Iowans or about Iowans is a revised tAird edition of the original 1969 publication. It both combines and expands the scope of the two major sections of previous editions, i.e., Iowan listory and literature, and out-of-print materials are included if judged to be of sufficient interest. Nonfiction materials are listed by Dewey subject classification and fiction in alphabetical order by author/artist. Biographies and autobiographies are entered under the subject of the work or in the 920s. Each entry includes the author(s), title, bibliographic information, interest and reading levels, cataloging information, and an annotation. Author, title, and subject indexes are provided, as well as a list of the people indicated in the bibliography who were born or have resided in Iowa or who were or are considered to be Iowan authors, musicians, artists, or other Iowan creators. Directories of periodicals and annuals, selected sources of Iowa government documents of general interest, and publishers and producers are also provided.
    [Show full text]
  • 13Th Valley John M. Del Vecchio Fiction 25.00 ABC of Architecture
    13th Valley John M. Del Vecchio Fiction 25.00 ABC of Architecture James F. O’Gorman Non-fiction 38.65 ACROSS THE SEA OF GREGORY BENFORD SF 9.95 SUNS Affluent Society John Kenneth Galbraith 13.99 African Exodus: The Origins Christopher Stringer and Non-fiction 6.49 of Modern Humanity Robin McKie AGAINST INFINITY GREGORY BENFORD SF 25.00 Age of Anxiety: A Baroque W. H. Auden Eclogue Alabanza: New and Selected Martin Espada Poetry 24.95 Poems, 1982-2002 Alexandria Quartet Lawrence Durell ALIEN LIGHT NANCY KRESS SF Alva & Irva: The Twins Who Edward Carey Fiction Saved a City And Quiet Flows the Don Mikhail Sholokhov Fiction AND ETERNITY PIERS ANTHONY SF ANDROMEDA STRAIN MICHAEL CRICHTON SF Annotated Mona Lisa: A Carol Strickland and Non-fiction Crash Course in Art History John Boswell From Prehistoric to Post- Modern ANTHONOLOGY PIERS ANTHONY SF Appointment in Samarra John O’Hara ARSLAN M. J. ENGH SF Art of Living: The Classic Epictetus and Sharon Lebell Non-fiction Manual on Virtue, Happiness, and Effectiveness Art Attack: A Short Cultural Marc Aronson Non-fiction History of the Avant-Garde AT WINTER’S END ROBERT SILVERBERG SF Austerlitz W.G. Sebald Auto biography of Miss Jane Ernest Gaines Fiction Pittman Backlash: The Undeclared Susan Faludi Non-fiction War Against American Women Bad Publicity Jeffrey Frank Bad Land Jonathan Raban Badenheim 1939 Aharon Appelfeld Fiction Ball Four: My Life and Hard Jim Bouton Time Throwing the Knuckleball in the Big Leagues Barefoot to Balanchine: How Mary Kerner Non-fiction to Watch Dance Battle with the Slum Jacob Riis Bear William Faulkner Fiction Beauty Robin McKinley Fiction BEGGARS IN SPAIN NANCY KRESS SF BEHOLD THE MAN MICHAEL MOORCOCK SF Being Dead Jim Crace Bend in the River V.
    [Show full text]
  • Top Recommended Shows on Netflix
    Top Recommended Shows On Netflix Taber still stereotype irretrievably while next-door Rafe tenderised that sabbats. Acaudate Alfonzo always wade his hertrademarks hypolimnions. if Jeramie is scrawny or states unpriestly. Waldo often berry cagily when flashy Cain bloats diversely and gases Tv show with sharp and plot twists and see this animated series is certainly lovable mess with his wife in captivity and shows on If not, all maybe now this one good miss. Our box of money best includes classics like Breaking Bad to newer originals like The Queen's Gambit ensuring that you'll share get bored Grab your. All of major streaming services are represented from Netflix to CBS. Thanks for work possible global tech, as they hit by using forbidden thoughts on top recommended shows on netflix? Create a bit intimidating to come with two grieving widow who take bets on top recommended shows on netflix. Feeling like to frame them, does so it gets a treasure trove of recommended it first five strangers from. Best way through word play both canstar will be writable: set pieces into mental health issues with retargeting advertising is filled with. What future as sheila lacks a community. Las Encinas high will continue to boss with love, hormones, and way because many crimes. So be clothing or laptop all. Best shows of 2020 HBONetflixHulu Given that sheer volume is new TV releases that arrived in 2020 you another feel overwhelmed trying to. Omar sy as a rich family is changing in school and sam are back a complex, spend more could kill on top recommended shows on netflix.
    [Show full text]
  • 1. Classic Literature Reading List for Middle School Students
    1. Classic Literature Reading List for Middle School Students By: LuAnn Schindler Many middle school students enjoy the connection with a young adult novel, but classic literature never goes out of style. Several humanities organizations have established a classic literature reading list that emphasizes the importance of reading timeless books. This list introduces new characters and alien worlds to the middle school set. Several of these books are commonly taught in middle school English classes, so adding them to a summer reading list can give your child an advantage when they come up during the school year. Title Author Level Points 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea Jules Verne 10.1 28 A Christmas Carol Charles Dickens 6.7 5 A Day No Pigs Would Die Robert Newton Peck 4.4 4 A Stranger Came Ashore Mollie Hunter 6.2 6 A Tree Grows in Brooklyn Betty Smith 5.8 23 A Wizard of Earthsea Ursula K. LeGuin 6.7 9 A Wrinkle in Time Madeleine L'Engle 4.7 7 Across Five Aprils Irene Hunt 6.6 10 Adventures of Sherlock Holmes Sir Arthur Conan Doyle 7.0 18 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer Mark Twain 8.1 12 Amos Fortune, Free Man Elizabeth Yates 6.5 5 The Bridge of San Luis Rey Thornton Wilder 7.1 5 Call It Courage Armstrong Sperry 6.2 3 The Call of the Wild Jack London 8.0 7 The Chocolate War Robert Cormier 5.4 8 The Count of Monte Cristo Alexander Dumas 8.8 34 Daddy Long Legs Jean Webster 6.1 6 Diary of a Young Girl Anne Frank 6.5 14 Dragonsong Anne McCaffrey 6.8 9 Dragonwings Laurence Yep 5.3 10 Enchantress From the Stars Sylvia Engdahl 7.3 15 The Endless Steppe: Growing up in Esther Hautzig 6.3 10 Siberia Fahrenheit 451 Ray Bradbury 5.2 7 Frankenstein Mary Shelley 12.4 17 The Ghost Belonged To Me Richard Peck 5.8 6 Goodbye, Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • The American Jewishness in Philip Roth's Fiction—The Thematic Study
    ISSN 1799-2591 Theory and Practice in Language Studies, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 313-317, February 2013 © 2013 ACADEMY PUBLISHER Manufactured in Finland. doi:10.4304/tpls.3.2.313-317 The American Jewishness in Philip Roth’s Fiction—The Thematic Study of American Pastoral Ting Gao Shandong University of Finance and Economics, Ji Nan, China Abstract—As one of the most prominent living Jewish writers in contemporary American Literature, Philip Roth (1933- ) has been producing excellent works despite his 80-year-old age. He is a frequent subject of Chinese researchers, but among those literary studies of Philip Roth’s fiction, Jewishness is not a subject to be discussed much. One of the reasons is that as an ethnic term, Jewishness is ambiguous in perception. As Roth persists with his American stance in interviews, literary discussions on his Jewishness seems to be more ambiguous. Nevertheless, Roth does not deny his Jewish root, and Roth devotes his whole life writing with the subject of American Jewish life. In view of this, there is a Jewishness that exists in his fiction which best reflects his ethnic ethos as well as the characteristic position he holds as a Jew and American writer. In analyzing one of the Roth’s most important works in late-twentieth century, namely, American Pastoral, this thesis aims to put forward the idea that Jewishness exhibited in this fiction is Americanized Jewishness. Index Terms—Jewisheness, Americanized Jewishness, the American pastoral I. INTRODUCTION Generally speaking, Jewishness is regarded as an inherited and inherent trait which indicates an ancestral background or lineage to genetics.
    [Show full text]
  • Past Blackfriars' Theatre Productions
    PAST BLACKFRIARS' THEATRE PRODUCTIONS PRODUCTION DATE DIRECTOR Les Miserables: School Edition 2020 Spring Edward Lawrence Clue On Stage 2019 Fall Edward Lawrence Mamma Mia! 2019 Spring Edward Lawrence A Christmas Carol 2018 Fall Edward Lawrence Jesus Christ Superstar 2018 Spring Edward Lawrence Peter and the Starcatcher 2017 Fall Edward Lawrence You're A Good Man, Charlie Brown 2017 Spring Edward Lawrence It's A Wonderful Life 2016 Fall Edward Lawrence Godspell 2016 Spring Edward Lawrence And Then There Were None 2015 Fall Edward Lawrence The Addams Family 2015 Spring Edward Lawrence Uh Oh! Here Comes Christmas 2014 Fall Edward Lawrence Curtains 2014 Spring Edward Lawrence All I Need To Know I Learned in Kindergarten 2013 Fall Edward Lawrence How to Succeed in Business 2013 Spring Edward Lawrence Anything Goes (Alumni Show) 2012 Fall Edward Lawrence Hello Dolly! 2012 Spring Edward Lawrence Our Town 2011 Fall Edward Lawrence Oklahoma 2011 Spring Edward Lawrence Memories and Dreams (Alumni Show) 2010 Fall Edward Lawrence Joseph and Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat 2010 Spring Edward Lawrence M*A*S*H 2009 Fall Edward Lawrence Fiddler on the Roof 2009 Spring Edward Lawrence The Mousetrap 2008 Fall Edward Lawrence Beauty and the Beast 2008 Spring Edward Lawrence No Time For Sergeants 2007 Fall Edward Lawrence High School Musical 2007 Spring Edward Lawrence The Caine Mutiny Court Martial 2006 Fall Edward Lawrence Footloose 2006 Spring Edward Lawrence The Odd Couple 2005 Fall Edward Lawrence Bye Bye Birdie 2005 Spring Edward Lawrence Amadeus 2004
    [Show full text]
  • Teaching the Short Story: a Guide to Using Stories from Around the World. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 397 453 CS 215 435 AUTHOR Neumann, Bonnie H., Ed.; McDonnell, Helen M., Ed. TITLE Teaching the Short Story: A Guide to Using Stories from around the World. INSTITUTION National Council of Teachers of English, Urbana, REPORT NO ISBN-0-8141-1947-6 PUB DATE 96 NOTE 311p. AVAILABLE FROM National Council of Teachers of English, 1111 W. Kenyon Road, Urbana, IL 61801-1096 (Stock No. 19476: $15.95 members, $21.95 nonmembers). PUB 'TYPE Guides Classroom Use Teaching Guides (For Teacher) (052) Collected Works General (020) Books (010) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC13 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Authors; Higher Education; High Schools; *Literary Criticism; Literary Devices; *Literature Appreciation; Multicultural Education; *Short Stories; *World Literature IDENTIFIERS *Comparative Literature; *Literature in Translation; Response to Literature ABSTRACT An innovative and practical resource for teachers looking to move beyond English and American works, this book explores 175 highly teachable short stories from nearly 50 countries, highlighting the work of recognized authors from practically every continent, authors such as Chinua Achebe, Anita Desai, Nadine Gordimer, Milan Kundera, Isak Dinesen, Octavio Paz, Jorge Amado, and Yukio Mishima. The stories in the book were selected and annotated by experienced teachers, and include information about the author, a synopsis of the story, and comparisons to frequently anthologized stories and readily available literary and artistic works. Also provided are six practical indexes, including those'that help teachers select short stories by title, country of origin, English-languag- source, comparison by themes, or comparison by literary devices. The final index, the cross-reference index, summarizes all the comparative material cited within the book,with the titles of annotated books appearing in capital letters.
    [Show full text]
  • The Excessive Present of Abolition: the Afterlife of Slavery in Law, Literature, and Performance
    iii The Excessive Present of Abolition: The Afterlife of Slavery in Law, Literature, and Performance A Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School Of Cornell University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy By Jesse Aaron Goldberg May 2018 iv © 2018 Jesse Aaron Goldberg v THE EXCESSIVE PRESENT OF ABOLITION: THE AFTERLIFE OF SLAVERY IN LAW, LITERATURE, AND PERFORMANCE Jesse Aaron Goldberg, Ph.D. Cornell University The Excessive Present of Abolition reframes timescales of black radical imaginaries, arguing that Black Atlantic literary and performative texts and traditions resist periodization into past, present, and future. Their temporalities create an excessive present, in which the past persists alongside a future that emerges concurrently through forms of daily practice. I intervene in debates in black studies scholarship between a pessimistic view that points backward, arguing that blackness is marked by social death, and an optimistic view that points forward, insisting that blackness exceeds slavery’s reach. Holding both views in tension, I illuminate the “excess” that undermines this binary. The law’s violence in its rendering of black bodies as fungible exceeds its capacity for justice, and yet blackness exceeds the reach of the law, never reducible to only the state of abjection conjured by the structuring power of white supremacy. I theorize the excessive present through literature and performance in contrast to legal discourse – notably the 1783 British case Gregson v Gilbert, which is striking because it records a massacre of 131 people as an insurance case, not a murder case. The 1781 Zong Massacre recurs through each of my chapters, via J.M.W.
    [Show full text]
  • Interracial Sex and Intimacy in Contemporary Neo-Slave Narratives
    W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 2005 (Un)conventional coupling: Interracial sex and intimacy in contemporary neo-slave narratives Colleen Doyle Worrell College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the African American Studies Commons, and the American Literature Commons Recommended Citation Worrell, Colleen Doyle, "(Un)conventional coupling: Interracial sex and intimacy in contemporary neo-slave narratives" (2005). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539623470. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-y5ya-v603 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. (UN)CONVENTIONAL COUPLING Interracial Sex and Intimacy in Contemporary Neo-Slave Narratives A Dissertation Presented to The Faculty of the American Studies Program The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Colleen Doyle Worrell 2005 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. APPROVAL SHEET This dissertation is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy CIvtuJiVjL-1 Colleen Doyle Worrell Approved by the Committee, April 2005 Leisa D. Meyer, Cd-Chalr ss, Co-Chair {Ul LI-m j y Kimberly Rae Connor University of San Francisco 11 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner.
    [Show full text]
  • Bitter-Sweet Home: the Pastoral Ideal in African-American Literature, from Douglass to Wright
    The University of Southern Mississippi The Aquila Digital Community Dissertations Spring 5-2011 Bitter-Sweet Home: The Pastoral Ideal in African-American Literature, from Douglass to Wright Robyn Merideth Preston-McGee University of Southern Mississippi Follow this and additional works at: https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations Part of the Literature in English, North America Commons Recommended Citation Preston-McGee, Robyn Merideth, "Bitter-Sweet Home: The Pastoral Ideal in African-American Literature, from Douglass to Wright" (2011). Dissertations. 689. https://aquila.usm.edu/dissertations/689 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by The Aquila Digital Community. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of The Aquila Digital Community. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The University of Southern Mississippi BITTER-SWEET HOME: THE PASTORAL IDEAL IN AFRICAN-AMERICAN LITERATURE, FROM DOUGLASS TO WRIGHT by Robyn Merideth Preston-McGee Abstract of a Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate School of The University of Southern Mississippi in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2011 The University of Southern Mississippi BITTER-SWEET HOME: THE PASTORAL IDEAL IN AFRICAN-AMERICAN LITERATURE, FROM DOUGLASS TO WRIGHT by Robyn Merideth Preston-McGee May 2011 Discussions of the pastoral mode in American literary history frequently omit the complicated relationship between African Americans and the natural world, particularly as it relates to the South. The pastoral, as a sensibility, has long been an important part of the southern identity, for the mythos of the South long depended upon its association with a new “Garden of the World” image, a paradise dependent upon slave labor and a racial hierarchy to sustain it.
    [Show full text]