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Now showing items 1-10 of 44
"All thinking things" and "Objects of all thought": Materiality and Thought in Wordsworth, Coleridge and Keats
(Vanderbilt University, 2009-04-20)
Twitter Fiction: A Shift in Author Function
(Vanderbilt University, 2016-04-25)
Twitter fiction, an example of twenty-first century digital narrative, allows authors to experiment with literary form, production, and dissemination as they engage readers through a communal network. Twitter offers creative ...
Social Horror and Social Media: The Threat of Emergent Technology in "Unfriended" and "Sickhouse"
(Vanderbilt University, 2017-04-24)
Burning Castles in Sherwood Forest: The Construction and Destruction of Political Ideology in Scott, Peacock, and Conan Doyle
(Vanderbilt University, 2012-04-18)
For this study, I have chosen to concentrate on three historical novels from the nineteenth-century that are set in the medieval period: Ivanhoe, by Walter Scott; Maid Marian, a reworking of the Robin Hood legend by Thomas ...
Aristotle Meets Apple: Rhetoric in the Podcast
(Vanderbilt University, 2018-04-24)
Podcasts such as Malcolm Gladwell’s Revisionist History and Manoush Zomorodi’s Note to Self, engage with, and extend, the deliberative rhetorical form. Aristotle defined deliberative rhetoric as a persuasive genre that ...
Absent Characters: Stage Space and Social Change in Modern Drama
(Vanderbilt University, 2017-04-24)
We'll Always Have Allusions: The Cultural Function of Allusions
(Vanderbilt University, 2017-04-24)
Portrait of a Grandmother
(Vanderbilt University, 2017-04-24)
The Fury and the Mire: Readers, Reading, and Our Digital World
(Vanderbilt University, 2013-04-17)
Binary Domination and Bondage: Blake's Representations of Race, Nationalism, and Gender
(Vanderbilt University, 2013-04-17)