-
Recent Posts
- Love = Need for Connection + Need for Survival + Bullshit
- Presidency
- Pulling the wings off M. Butterfly: Dramatic Irony, Performance and the Third Space in Hwang’s dramatic script and film adaptation
- Failing to Cope
- The Two Oroonokos
- Inventing Identities: Becoming a Mestiza in Julia Alvarez’s How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents and Esmeralda Santiago’s When I Was Puerto Rican
- An Investigation of Langston Hughes’ “Third Degree”
- Irony and Immortality: An Explication of A. E. Stallings’ “Arachne Gives Thanks to Athena”
- The Duty of Man in Austen’s Mansfield Park and Emma
- Critique of Last Child in the Woods
Categories
Category Archives: Edition: Fall 2010
Digging Deep: Hontoon Island links pre-Columbian, Twitter worlds
By Gerri Bauer The ferry ride that delivers visitors to Hontoon Island State Park is brief, but it bridges more than a narrow channel of the St. Johns River. We approach the way the island’s pre-Columbian inhabitants did, by vessel, … Continue reading
Posted in 300 Level Papers, Arts/Culture, Edition: Fall 2010, Environment, Nature Writing
Tagged literature, Stetson, Twitter
Comments Off
The Impact of Natural Resource Dependence on Human Right Practices in the Former Soviet Republics
By Samantha Lange Abstract This study explores the relationship between dependence on hydrocarbon export revenues and human rights practices in the context of the fifteen former Soviet republics.[1] Here I seek to expand upon the literature surrounding the “resource curse”— … Continue reading
Posted in Edition: Fall 2010, Environment, Graduate Level Papers, Nature Writing, Politics
Tagged Human Rights, literature, Political Science, Soviet Republics, Stetson
Comments Off
Rationalizing the Taboo: Personal Essays on Gender and Species
By Helena Heinisch When I think about being a woman, and when my consciousness of that state of being was first recognizable, I invariably and inevitably return to my origins of sexual abuse at the hands of a male family … Continue reading
Posted in 400 Level Papers, Edition: Fall 2010, Gender, Nature Writing
Tagged Abuse, gender, literature, species, Stetson, Taboo
Comments Off
A Beacon of True Femaleness: A Sociological Analysis of Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse
By Maggie Sheridan In her theoretical work Women and Writing, Virginia Woolf begins a discussion of literary gender dynamics with an article entitled “Women and Fiction.” “The title of this article,” she writes, “can be read in two ways: it … Continue reading
Posted in 400 Level Papers, Edition: Fall 2010, Gender
Tagged fiction, literature, Stetson, To the Lighthouse, Virginia Wolf, Women
Comments Off
Emma Woodhouse-Powerfully in Love
By Jessica Allen Jane Austen’s Emma, while essentially a marriage plot concerned with the niceties, formalities, and strictures of a hierarchical society, portrays a heroine vastly different from the majority of Austen’s female characters. From the opening paragraph of the … Continue reading
Posted in 300 Level Papers, Arts/Culture, Edition: Fall 2010, Gender
Tagged Emma, English, gender, Jane Austen, literature, love, marriage, Stetson, Woodhouse
Comments Off
Jane Goodall: Relating Science to Ordinary People
By Ashley E. Rutherford Thesis: Goodall not only recognizes the behavioral and emotional similarities between humans and chimpanzees, but she also identifies the need for people to release themselves of daily conventions, which complicate our social relations. During her work … Continue reading
Posted in 100 Level Papers, Edition: Fall 2010, Environment, Nature Writing, Science
Tagged animals, behavior, chimpanzees, environment, Jane Goodall, nature, science, Stetson University, Writing
Comments Off