Browsing by Subject "Human body in literature"
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- Item"As You Can See": Brecht, Butler, and the Body in Caryl Churchill's 'Cloud Nine'(2012) Hammel, Hannah; Stadler, Gustavus
- ItemCelebrity and the Body in 'The Bostonians'(2012) Miller, Lawrence J.; Stadler, Gustavus
- ItemDivine Embodiment and Cosmic Tragedy in Prometheus Desmotes(2011) Reisman, Asher Jacob; Roberts, Deborah H.In this thesis I posit a new reading of the dramatic structure of Prometheus Desmotes, in which the textual and visual features of the play's performance are principally oriented towards the impression of a keen awareness of Prometheus' body in the attention of the audience. This impression is initially produced by the horrific violence of the prologue. This opening scene describes the body of Prometheus and its violation in the unrelentingly corporal terms from the language of human embodiment, while also powerfully affirming his immortality and godhood in the extent to which the violence surpasses all human endurance. These features of Prometheus' body (pitiable physical suffering and divinity) are sounded in a corresponding and intensified manner in the play's cataclysmic finale and more finely articulated and reiterated through the play's otherwise static middle by comparison to other figures whose bodies will share some but never all of these attributes. The significance of this conceptual depiction of a divine body is made clearer by situating Desmotes in relation to its chief predecessors, Homer and Hesiod, in the literary treatment of divine bodies and divine existence more generally. The revisions Desmotes makes to these earlier views is to amplify the prominence of divine violence and suffering and to destabilize the narrative structures which govern it; overturning Homer's program of an Olympus existing in blissful stasis and Hesiod's Zeus-centered cosmic history. These changes open the possibility for genuine tragedy among the gods. Desmotes demonstrates the profound power of such a tragedy first in its long, complex meditation on the body of Prometheus, broken and eternal, and also in the cosmic alterity it envisions in the drama's apocalyptic finale.
- ItemExploring the perverse body: The Monk and Melmoth the Wanderer(2004) Jacobson, Laura A.; Sherman, DeboraRevenge. Obsession. Desire. Death. These are but a few of the dark and forbidding foundations pervading the genre of the Gothic horror. Though they arrive in different disguises and embodiments within the text, each awful trope is explored in ghastly detail by both characters and readers of Gothic stories. In Charles Maturin's Melmoth the Wanderer and Matthew "Monk" Lewis' The Monk, the body centers as the vehicle through which these disturbing issues are brought forth and examined. The body in its various roles and formations serves as a literary device of exploration, being a significant literal and figurative entity. Each novel is a fantastic and overwhelming passage into the darker elements of life, culminating in scenes of bodily destruction and devastation. My thesis explores the body, the Gothic, and the perversion of desire. Using theorists such as Michel Foucault and Elaine Scarry, I explore themes of perversion, pain, and death to deconstruct the body in words
- ItemFrom Artificial to the Real: Bodies and Stereotyping in Ralph Ellison's 'Invisible Man'(2006) Foote, Meredith; Zwarg, Christina, 1949-
- Item"Something akin to freedom": 'Writing' the Shamed Body in Harriet Jacobs' Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl(2011) Schiefer, Maura; McGrane, Laura