This dissertation traces invocations and theories of electric power in modernist literature by women, showing how four modernist authors—Edith Wharton, Hilda Doolittle (H.D.), Olive Moore, and Jean Rhys—deploy electricity in their fiction and highlight its varied and contradictory cultural meanings. Modernist literature by women leverages the open and strange impressions from the era of what electricity might mean, so that authors might make their own arguments about where artistic impulses originate, how homes would change when they became wired, how modernization would change modernist art forms, or why some social spaces gleam brighter than others. Edith Wharton and Jean Rhys highlight cultural and class system dynamics with their electr...
Virginia Woolf dates the beginning of modernity “In or about December, 1910,” when “human character ...
ABSTRACT The focus of my thesis project is to investigate how three modernist women writers, Virgini...
This dissertation, “Women’s Unspeakable Desire in British and German Modernism,” argues that the Wei...
This dissertation traces invocations and theories of electric power in modernist literature by women...
Graduation date: 2013This thesis explores the electrified female subject in two novels, Theodore Dre...
This interdisciplinary dissertation traces the development of a specific thread of American women\u2...
Challenging the tendency of scholars to view women writers of the modernist era as isolated artists ...
Between 1870 and 1916 electricity occupied the minds of some of America’s most prominent authors. Be...
This dissertation argues for a reevaluation of 20 th-century women\u27s life writing in the context ...
International audienceIn this introduction, I evoke the poetic force and spectacular experiences of ...
This thesis examines accounts of electricity in journalism, short stories, novels, poetry and instru...
This dissertation investigates mathematics as a multivalent metaphor in twentieth-century fiction an...
The rising field of new modernisms continues to breathe new life into the literature of marginalized...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...
This dissertation investigates mathematics as a multivalent metaphor in twentieth-century fiction an...
Virginia Woolf dates the beginning of modernity “In or about December, 1910,” when “human character ...
ABSTRACT The focus of my thesis project is to investigate how three modernist women writers, Virgini...
This dissertation, “Women’s Unspeakable Desire in British and German Modernism,” argues that the Wei...
This dissertation traces invocations and theories of electric power in modernist literature by women...
Graduation date: 2013This thesis explores the electrified female subject in two novels, Theodore Dre...
This interdisciplinary dissertation traces the development of a specific thread of American women\u2...
Challenging the tendency of scholars to view women writers of the modernist era as isolated artists ...
Between 1870 and 1916 electricity occupied the minds of some of America’s most prominent authors. Be...
This dissertation argues for a reevaluation of 20 th-century women\u27s life writing in the context ...
International audienceIn this introduction, I evoke the poetic force and spectacular experiences of ...
This thesis examines accounts of electricity in journalism, short stories, novels, poetry and instru...
This dissertation investigates mathematics as a multivalent metaphor in twentieth-century fiction an...
The rising field of new modernisms continues to breathe new life into the literature of marginalized...
This dissertation explores connections among American women writers of differing racial, class, and ...
This dissertation investigates mathematics as a multivalent metaphor in twentieth-century fiction an...
Virginia Woolf dates the beginning of modernity “In or about December, 1910,” when “human character ...
ABSTRACT The focus of my thesis project is to investigate how three modernist women writers, Virgini...
This dissertation, “Women’s Unspeakable Desire in British and German Modernism,” argues that the Wei...