My dissertation is concerned with experiences of individualization in the context of ethnic group identification; and by extension, the instabilities inherent to defining certain American novels as ethnic, and others as mainstream. I read post-1960 American novels that do not fit into either categorization and have come under critical fire for their respective presentations of certain ethnic groups. These texts include J.D. Salinger\u27s Franny and Zooey, Carlene Hatcher Polite\u27s The Flagellants, Almanac of the Dead by Leslie Marmon Silko, and The Human Stain by Philip Roth. These novels structure the narrative present through characters\u27 crises of individual identity. I argue that through these scenes the novels reveal, not only how ...
In my dissertation, I ask in what way intercultural literature contributes to the re-definition of ‘...
This dissertation argues that postmodern American fiction has strategically performed a series of re...
Until now, there has been little sustained critical attention to the way African American literature...
My dissertation is concerned with experiences of individualization in the context of ethnic group id...
My dissertation develops the concept of the misfit minority, a literary sensibility emergent in the ...
The world, right now, is more culturally diverse and literature than it ever has been in the past. N...
Twentieth-century literature and theory have offered no shortage of challenges to the unity of perso...
The dissertation locates a central concern in twentieth-century American literature with the exclusi...
“Ethnic Trouble: Ethnicization and American Literature in the Twenty-First Century” argues that ethn...
This dissertation examines selected mid-Twentieth Century novels by four American writers (Carson Mc...
Restricted until 02 Aug. 2012.My dissertation project is a comparative study of very recent Anglo-Am...
In Diversity in Families, sociologists Maxine Baca Zinn, D. Stanley Eitzen, and Barbara Wells assert...
This dissertation focuses on recent instances of mixed race literature in American culture such as D...
This dissertation attempts, in its limited way, to redress the repeated erasure of trauma from publi...
This dissertation is an attempt to rethink the relation between narrative and the historical categor...
In my dissertation, I ask in what way intercultural literature contributes to the re-definition of ‘...
This dissertation argues that postmodern American fiction has strategically performed a series of re...
Until now, there has been little sustained critical attention to the way African American literature...
My dissertation is concerned with experiences of individualization in the context of ethnic group id...
My dissertation develops the concept of the misfit minority, a literary sensibility emergent in the ...
The world, right now, is more culturally diverse and literature than it ever has been in the past. N...
Twentieth-century literature and theory have offered no shortage of challenges to the unity of perso...
The dissertation locates a central concern in twentieth-century American literature with the exclusi...
“Ethnic Trouble: Ethnicization and American Literature in the Twenty-First Century” argues that ethn...
This dissertation examines selected mid-Twentieth Century novels by four American writers (Carson Mc...
Restricted until 02 Aug. 2012.My dissertation project is a comparative study of very recent Anglo-Am...
In Diversity in Families, sociologists Maxine Baca Zinn, D. Stanley Eitzen, and Barbara Wells assert...
This dissertation focuses on recent instances of mixed race literature in American culture such as D...
This dissertation attempts, in its limited way, to redress the repeated erasure of trauma from publi...
This dissertation is an attempt to rethink the relation between narrative and the historical categor...
In my dissertation, I ask in what way intercultural literature contributes to the re-definition of ‘...
This dissertation argues that postmodern American fiction has strategically performed a series of re...
Until now, there has been little sustained critical attention to the way African American literature...