This thesis investigates—and seeks to address—the excision, marginalization and sequestering of female work within the elegiac tradition. Beginning with an analysis of key texts in elegy scholarship from the last thirty years, and the ways in which they participate in—and perpetuate—this marginalization, the thesis develops a transhistorical sketch of the elegiac tradition. This sketch examines the evolution of elegy as a genre, outlining Western cultural frameworks for understanding mourning, and historical perspectives which consider grief expression as a threat requiring constraint; as well as significant shifts in medical, theological and philosophical conceptions of melancholy—in order to delineate how and why women’s elegiac work has ...
While Fred D’Aguiar’s preoccupation with acknowledging the dead and honoring their memory gives his ...
Contemporary scholarship has seen increasing interest in the study of elegy. The present work attemp...
This thesis addresses a condition of ‘overtakelessness’ – a word used by Emily Dickinson to refer to...
It is observed that, a genre of folk literature, "elegy" which consists of the oral and melodic expr...
Abstract only availableLandmark studies by psychologists Kalish and Reynolds in the 1970s and de Rid...
textIn my dissertation, "Writing with an Iron Pen: Gender and Genre in Early American Elegy," I show...
Scholarship has traditionally characterized elegy as a Eurocentric tradition – a genealogy spanning ...
This dissertation is an investigation into the representation of mourning and melancholia in the wor...
Bypassing the current theory that attributes the absence of consolation in modern elegies to melanch...
Bypassing the current theory that attributes the absence of consolation in modern elegies to melanch...
Elegiac Citizens: Sentimentality during the War on Terror opens new ground for scholarship on the re...
Elegiac Citizens: Sentimentality during the War on Terror opens new ground for scholarship on the re...
Thesis advisor: Marjorie HowesFocusing on elegiac dimensions of the museum, Reinventing the Museum: ...
2014-04-09This dissertation uncovers a markedly consistent and transhistorical critical bias that ha...
This dissertation contains two parts: Part I, which discusses the elegy of possessive intent, a sub...
While Fred D’Aguiar’s preoccupation with acknowledging the dead and honoring their memory gives his ...
Contemporary scholarship has seen increasing interest in the study of elegy. The present work attemp...
This thesis addresses a condition of ‘overtakelessness’ – a word used by Emily Dickinson to refer to...
It is observed that, a genre of folk literature, "elegy" which consists of the oral and melodic expr...
Abstract only availableLandmark studies by psychologists Kalish and Reynolds in the 1970s and de Rid...
textIn my dissertation, "Writing with an Iron Pen: Gender and Genre in Early American Elegy," I show...
Scholarship has traditionally characterized elegy as a Eurocentric tradition – a genealogy spanning ...
This dissertation is an investigation into the representation of mourning and melancholia in the wor...
Bypassing the current theory that attributes the absence of consolation in modern elegies to melanch...
Bypassing the current theory that attributes the absence of consolation in modern elegies to melanch...
Elegiac Citizens: Sentimentality during the War on Terror opens new ground for scholarship on the re...
Elegiac Citizens: Sentimentality during the War on Terror opens new ground for scholarship on the re...
Thesis advisor: Marjorie HowesFocusing on elegiac dimensions of the museum, Reinventing the Museum: ...
2014-04-09This dissertation uncovers a markedly consistent and transhistorical critical bias that ha...
This dissertation contains two parts: Part I, which discusses the elegy of possessive intent, a sub...
While Fred D’Aguiar’s preoccupation with acknowledging the dead and honoring their memory gives his ...
Contemporary scholarship has seen increasing interest in the study of elegy. The present work attemp...
This thesis addresses a condition of ‘overtakelessness’ – a word used by Emily Dickinson to refer to...