Now showing items 35-54 of 92

  • False Authenticity in the Films of Woody Allen 

    Vick, Nicholas (East Carolina University, 2012)
    Woody Allen is an auteur who is deeply concerned with the visual presentation of his cityscapes. However, each city that Allen films is presented in such a glamorous light that the depiction of the cities is falsely ...
  • Finding Displacement through Incest in Salman Rushdie's The Ground Beneath her Feet and Fury 

    Sinor, Katie (East Carolina University, 2014)
    Incest is a widespread theme in literature that continues to grow in frequency (Barnes 3). It is rarely addressed amongst scholars due to being a taboo topic, but in this thesis I aim to address it and analyze it thoroughly ...
  • Finding Home : I've Been This Girl All Along 

    Woolard, Tracy (East Carolina University, 2012)
    Where is home if you have no definitive place to call home, such as a house you grew up in and someone in your family still lives there? My early life was spent living on Seymour Johnson and For Walton Beach Air Force ...
  • FISTFUL OF DEBRIS 

    Winar, Amanda J. (East Carolina University, 2010)
    Fistful of Debris is a collection of fiction aimed to explore the varied dimensions of familial loss. Each piece focuses on the personal growth and intimate details of a female protagonist's life, as she attempts to rebuild ...
  • A Folkloric Study On Wide Sargasso Sea 

    Uzun, Esra (East Carolina University, 2011)
    This study aims to offer an alternative approach to analyze and understand literary texts through folklore. I focused on Jean Rhys's famous novel Wide Sargasso Sea, which has often been examined through a postcolonial ...
  • FOUR STORIES : A STUDY IN GENRE 

    Evans, Jeffrey L. (East Carolina University, 2010)
    Genre is a label of classification imposed on literary works, usually as a means to understand how to market a project. The traditional form - "literary fiction" - is the most common, but a visit to any bookstore will ...
  • Ghosts in a Lighthouse 

    Smith, Britney N. (East Carolina University, 2011)
    This collection of poems represents my engagement with the notion of death and its' inevitable outcome in both the secular and Christian reference. It focuses on the unclear terms of death and the possible after-lives that ...
  • The Grave That Knows My Bones 

    Servie, Sarah (East Carolina University, 2011)
    The Grave That Knows My Bones focuses on the relationship between a WWII and Vietnam veteran and his son. The story is of my grandfather, a hardened and disciplined soldier, my father, a boy who grew up troubled by confusion ...
  • Historical Trauma in Native American and Jewish Literatures 

    Reagan, Juliana (East Carolina University, 2012)
    Dr. Maria Yellow Horse Brave Heart defines historical trauma as the "collective emotional and psychological injury both over the life span and across generations, resulting from a cataclysmic history of genocide" (Ottenbacher ...
  • "How Do I Reach These Keeeds?" : A New Teacher Uses Personality Type to Rethink Cognition, Motivation, and Engagement 

    Gilbert, Jeffrey (East Carolina University, 2012)
    The following study investigates one teacher's experience using the Myers Briggs Type Indicator in teaching first-year writing, contrasting my personal experiences as a novice composition instructor with mythic pop-culture ...
  • Hungarian Identity : Constancy and Change in the Father Land, Mother Tongue, and Family Lines 

    Hardy, Paula (East Carolina University, 2014)
    The unique history and language of the Hungarian people have created a distinct cultural identity. Although this unusual identity can be a source of great pride, it also can lead to a sense of isolation and otherness. ...
  • I Might Be Wrong ; and, As If It Was Made of Glass 

    Mason, Stephen (East Carolina University, 2012)
    These two stories of exceptional length feature narrators whose idiosyncratic moral dilemmas are indicative of larger social ills. Instead of the traditional epiphany so prevalent in 20th Century short stories, the characters ...
  • Identifying White Knight Syndrome : A Scavenger Hunt 

    Dublin, Kevin (East Carolina University, 2012)
    "Scavenger Hunt" is a collection of poems thematically linked by a single persona and the repeated development and deterioration of his failed relationships as a result of "White Knight Syndrome." White knights, in this ...
  • An Immortal Science : Alchemy's Role in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows 

    Angel, Will A. (East Carolina University, 2011)
    I chose Hallows above any other novel in the series because it holds a stronger connection with alchemy than any of those before it. Hallows provides a density of alchemical symbols and imagery that far outshines any of ...
  • THE IMPACT OF BAL TASCHIT IN THE WRITINGS OF ANNE FRANK, PRIMO LEVI, AND ELIE WIESEL 

    Childres, Matthew Glenn (East Carolina University, 2013)
    This thesis focuses on how the Jewish tradition of Bal Taschit influenced the behavior and thoughts of prisoners during the Holocaust. The interaction with nature in Holocaust works indicates an adherence to this tradition ...
  • INDIGENOUS IDENTITY, ORAL TRADITION, AND THE LAND IN THE POETRY OF OODGEROO NOONUCCAL, LUCI TAPAHONSO, AND HAUNANI-KAY TRASK 

    Woods, Amanda (East Carolina University, 2010)
    This thesis is a postcolonial, ecocritical examination of the poetry of Oodgeroo Noonuccal, Luci Tapahonso, and Haunani-Kay Trask. It considers the use of poetry as a continuation of oral tradition, the poets' individual ...
  • Issues of Criticism and Authorship in Arthur Miller's All My Sons : A Bakhtinian Reading 

    Salvadori Heritage, Barbara (East Carolina University, 2011)
    All my Sons may not be Miller's most known work today, but it is the play that brought him recognition as a playwright. Since its first production, in 1947, critics have assessed the play's content and characters through ...
  • Last Wills 

    Loonam, John (East Carolina University, 2013)
    This short story collection, LAST WILLS, portrays four individuals' transitions into late adulthood. "Dan's Man Otto": an aging, socially estranged man attempts to cope with later-life struggles due to another man's fatal ...
  • Lonely Voices Crying in the Wilderness 

    Garrou, Thomas J. (East Carolina University, 2012)
    This text is a work of creative fiction that delves into the minds of those who have experienced conflict. Whether it is during war or life situations, these stories are often internalized. The text explores how the young ...
  • The Melancholic Subject : Exploring Loss and Relationships in African American and Asian American Fiction 

    Smoak, Melissa Sue (East Carolina University, 2014)
    The goal of this thesis is to closely examine the psychological effects of oppression for both African Americans and Asian Americans. The fiction created by writers of these ethnic groups and the characters they create ...