Flannery O'Connor based what she called her "anagogic vision" on the medieval way of seeing the world that allowed the reader of a text to discern "different levels of reality in one image or one situation." In my thesis I focus on the ways in which O'Connor revives this literary strategy and adapts it to address the modern cultural context. Accordingly, I examine in particular how her fiction engages Descartes' worship of consciousness and Nietzsche's supposition that "God is dead" by anagogically endowing her characters' bodies with two layers of signification. The first signified body is the spiritually-dead body, which belongs to the character who believes he is a god unto himself by virtue of his intellect. Since the character accepts ...
Flannery O’Connor and G.K. Chesterton share one conviction that is also a concern. It could be summe...
At its simplest, this dissertation proposes two, possibly counterintuitive but mutually dependent, c...
This feminist disability study of Flannery O’Connor’s short fiction considers the ways in which the ...
The purpose of this dissertation is to trace the literary career of Flannery O'Connor and to show th...
This thesis is an attempt to categorise and examine the most important imagery in Flannery O Connor ...
Flannery O'Connor is a Roman Catholic who believes that the Christian who would create art today can...
Mary Flannery O’Connor (1925-64) was born in Savannah, Georgia as the only child of the American Iri...
This dissertation explores the previously overlooked connections between the fiction of Flannery O'C...
The entire body or Flannery O\u27Connor\u27s published fiction can be found in two volumes, One, a S...
This thesis will treat Flannery O'Connor's use of the devil in all of her work from Wise Blood throu...
The body of scholarship regarding Flannery O’Connor generally falls into one of three camps: biograp...
In this dissertation, I argue that spiritual representations by characters, authored by Marilynne Ro...
This thesis explores Flannery O’Connor’s Catholic imagination throughout her fiction, incorporating ...
This thesis attempts to demonstrate the way in which Flannery 0' Connor uses the personal letter as ...
This essay analyzes Flannery O’Connor’s use of characters whose bodies depart from cultural rules an...
Flannery O’Connor and G.K. Chesterton share one conviction that is also a concern. It could be summe...
At its simplest, this dissertation proposes two, possibly counterintuitive but mutually dependent, c...
This feminist disability study of Flannery O’Connor’s short fiction considers the ways in which the ...
The purpose of this dissertation is to trace the literary career of Flannery O'Connor and to show th...
This thesis is an attempt to categorise and examine the most important imagery in Flannery O Connor ...
Flannery O'Connor is a Roman Catholic who believes that the Christian who would create art today can...
Mary Flannery O’Connor (1925-64) was born in Savannah, Georgia as the only child of the American Iri...
This dissertation explores the previously overlooked connections between the fiction of Flannery O'C...
The entire body or Flannery O\u27Connor\u27s published fiction can be found in two volumes, One, a S...
This thesis will treat Flannery O'Connor's use of the devil in all of her work from Wise Blood throu...
The body of scholarship regarding Flannery O’Connor generally falls into one of three camps: biograp...
In this dissertation, I argue that spiritual representations by characters, authored by Marilynne Ro...
This thesis explores Flannery O’Connor’s Catholic imagination throughout her fiction, incorporating ...
This thesis attempts to demonstrate the way in which Flannery 0' Connor uses the personal letter as ...
This essay analyzes Flannery O’Connor’s use of characters whose bodies depart from cultural rules an...
Flannery O’Connor and G.K. Chesterton share one conviction that is also a concern. It could be summe...
At its simplest, this dissertation proposes two, possibly counterintuitive but mutually dependent, c...
This feminist disability study of Flannery O’Connor’s short fiction considers the ways in which the ...