Mark Twain as a Political Satirist (open access)

Mark Twain as a Political Satirist

This thesis discusses Mark Twain as a political satirist in Nevada and during the Gilded Age. There are also chapters covering Politics and Slavery, Democracy and Monarchy, as well as Imperialism and War.
Date: August 1953
Creator: Gardner, Gwendolyn Clayton
System: The UNT Digital Library
Realism in Hamlin Garland's Prose Fiction of Midwestern Farm Life (open access)

Realism in Hamlin Garland's Prose Fiction of Midwestern Farm Life

No artist can be set apart from the developments and problems of his day, and so it was that Hamlin Garland, literary spokesman for the Midwestern farmers of the last quarter of the nineteenth century, was inevitably bound to portray his region with all of its economic, social, and political complexities. His work was destined to be influenced by the echoes of the Civil War, the immigration of both Americans and foreigners to a fertile, grain-producing country, and by all the problems of adjustment that faced this agrarian society.
Date: 1950
Creator: Brack, Patsy Lee
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of the Nonconformist in the Novels of Sinclair Lewis (open access)

Characterization of the Nonconformist in the Novels of Sinclair Lewis

A cursory glance into the background of Sinclair Lewis reveals that he was an ardent nonconformist. In this study, however, it is pertinent to view more closely the conditions that caused his rebellious attitudes, not only those concerning social reform but also those concerning his personal quest for individuality.
Date: August 1954
Creator: Cowser, Robert G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shakespeare's Monarchical Views (open access)

Shakespeare's Monarchical Views

The purpose of this study is to treat one aspect of Shakespeare's political views, his views on monarchy as found in the two great English history tetralogies, and to compare them to the monarchical views of his age.
Date: January 1959
Creator: Lewis, Barbara Bennet
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modern Trends in the Interpretation of Falstaff (open access)

Modern Trends in the Interpretation of Falstaff

The different interpretations of the character of Sir John Falstaff have been so controversial that at no time since the presentation of the Henry IV plays have critics been able to agree as to his precise qualities. He has been called the greatest humorous character in all literature by even those critics who have spoken adversely of his other traits. George Bernard Shaw called him "a besotted and disgusting old wretch," an opinion added to those of others who have seen him as a coward, liar, cheat, thief, glutton, and rogue. There is no denying that he is one of the most captivating and controversial of all characters in English literature.
Date: August 1956
Creator: Boswell, Fred Page
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ellen Glasgow, Virginia Rebel (open access)

Ellen Glasgow, Virginia Rebel

This study shows that her fiction was an influence in pointing the way to American Naturalism as a literary school and that, by her devotion to a single idea over a long span of years, she endows all womankind with stature.
Date: 1956
Creator: White, Imogene Ryan
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Influence of Women on Walt Whitman (open access)

The Influence of Women on Walt Whitman

It is the scope and purpose of this study to investigate the Whitman-woman relationship and to attempt to answer, so far as this Whitman puzzle may be answered, the question of the effect of women on the Whitman philosophy and the nature of that philosophy concerning women.
Date: 1952
Creator: Grace, Christine Lane Hawkins
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pragmatism as the Religion of Defoe (open access)

Pragmatism as the Religion of Defoe

This study attempts to resolve the question of Defoe's sincerity through examination of his life, his journalistic writings, and his major works or imagination.
Date: 1957
Creator: Angell, Charles Edward
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Messenger in Shakespeare (open access)

The Messenger in Shakespeare

Examines the functions of messengers in six plays by Shakespeare.
Date: May 1955
Creator: Branch, James Wesley
System: The UNT Digital Library
Social and Political Conservatism in Joseph Conrad's Fiction (open access)

Social and Political Conservatism in Joseph Conrad's Fiction

The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the evidences of Conrad's conservative tastes and beliefs as indicated by his way of life and his associations, and to show, further, that this conservatism is revealed directly and indirectly in his stories and novels.
Date: 1951
Creator: Taylor, Ouita Winona
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pessimism in Three Major English Poets of the Nineteenth Century (open access)

Pessimism in Three Major English Poets of the Nineteenth Century

This thesis examines the evidences of pessimism in the poetry of each poet, substantiated when possible by parallel prose writings and other critical and biographical material; and finally, it reaches tentative conclusions about the direction of the change in pessimistic outlook of three poets.
Date: August 1958
Creator: Simms, Bobbie Gwen
System: The UNT Digital Library
Christian Orthodoxy in the English Novel 1930-1950 (open access)

Christian Orthodoxy in the English Novel 1930-1950

This thesis discusses Christian orthodoxy in the English novel during the time period from 1930 to 1950.
Date: January 1959
Creator: Burleson, James B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Development of the Unheroic Hero in the Modern Novel (open access)

The Development of the Unheroic Hero in the Modern Novel

This thesis explores the development of the unheroic hero in the modern novel.
Date: August 1953
Creator: Loving, Billie Ruth
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of Women in the Fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne (open access)

Characterization of Women in the Fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne

While his Transcendentalist contemporaries were expounding their optimistic philosophy of natural goodness, progress, and perfectibility, Hawthorne probed into the human heart, recording the darkest motives of his characters and writing bitter criticism of life. Around him men were declaring that scientific inventions, political organizations, and religious reforms were ushering in a new era; but Hawthorne viewed the new society as a probable continuation of old evils and a manufacturer of new ones. His fiction has been called "an elaborate study of the centrifugal, . . . a dramatization of all those social and psychological forces that lead to disunion, fragmentation, dispersion, incoherence. Critics generally comment on Hawthorne's obsession with guilt. His pessimistic analysis of the mind, his somber outlook on living, and his personal tendency to solitude are frequently credited to his Puritan ancestry; yet as Arvin points out, "He had no more Puritan blood than Emerson and hundreds of other New Englanders of his time: and who will say that they were obsessed with the spectral presence of guilty. One must go beyond Calvinist theology to comprehend the source of guilt that hovers over the pages of his fiction. His religious, moral, educational, and economic background was so typical …
Date: August 1956
Creator: Estes, Emory Dolphous, Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparison of Chaucer's and Shakespeare's Treatments of the Troilus-Cressida Story (open access)

A Comparison of Chaucer's and Shakespeare's Treatments of the Troilus-Cressida Story

The purpose of this study is to trace the changes that the story of Troilus-Cressida underwent from age to age and to discover how these came about and how they influenced the form and concept of Chaucer's and Shakespeare's versions of the tale.
Date: 1951
Creator: Taylor, Merwin Elvin
System: The UNT Digital Library
Browning's The Ring and the Book in Twentieth-century Criticism (open access)

Browning's The Ring and the Book in Twentieth-century Criticism

Proceeding from the general judgment that The Ring and the Book is, indeed, Browning's greatest achievement, and that it, more than any other of his works, was responsible for establishing him in an extraordinary position of public acceptance and esteem, I propose, in this study, to examine the four features of The Ring and the Book which have most frequently attracted critical attention and to which the greater portion of analysis and review of The Ring and the Book have been devoted.
Date: January 1955
Creator: Blakney, Paul S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Development of Don Juan as a Dramatic Character Before 1800 (open access)

The Development of Don Juan as a Dramatic Character Before 1800

This thesis examines the myth and legend of Don Juan and the development of the dramatic character prior to 1800.
Date: August 1953
Creator: Lloyd, Kenneth
System: The UNT Digital Library
Religion as a Factor in the Literary Career of Nathaniel Hawthorne (open access)

Religion as a Factor in the Literary Career of Nathaniel Hawthorne

The purpose of this study is to evaluate various religious elements in Nathainel Hawthorne's life in relation to his career as a literary artist. The moral seriousness of this author at once strikes us as being something closely akin to religious sentiment, but he refused to endorse any specific dogma or to subscribe to any one organized faith. We know from his work that he had a religion, but his silence leaves ample room for conjecture if we wish to "label" him, or decide which of those religions that he contemplated was most congenial to his nature.
Date: July 1952
Creator: Miller, John Davidson
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of the Schoolteacher in Nineteenth Century American Fiction (open access)

Characterization of the Schoolteacher in Nineteenth Century American Fiction

This study is limited largely to teachers in the public or common schools, although a few academy and female seminary teachers and at least one governess are included. It is not a definitive study, but a sufficient number of writings have been examined to make a fair sampling of the range of the nineteenth century American fiction.
Date: August 1954
Creator: Duncan, Mozelle
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of the Heroine in the Fiction of Ernest Hemingway (open access)

Characterization of the Heroine in the Fiction of Ernest Hemingway

The purpose of this paper is to examine both the women in Hemingway's life and his works, to search for influences exerted by the biographical women, to categorize the fictional women, and to draw whatever conclusions the evidence may justify.
Date: 1956
Creator: Young, Earle B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of Mechanics: Prescription and Use (open access)

A Study of Mechanics: Prescription and Use

This thesis studies historical punctuation its uses and standards developed.
Date: August 1952
Creator: Le Beau, Maurine Schott
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Comic Element in the Novels of Thomas Wolfe (open access)

The Comic Element in the Novels of Thomas Wolfe

As to form, Wolfe's novels are deliberately loose, because that is important to his purpose. Conceiving America as an open society of potentiality, he could do no less than remain open himself. To do otherwise would have meant impotence if not sterility. In this thesis, I shall attempt to show that the episodes, divergences, and observations all illustrate and amplify this spiritual growth.
Date: 1957
Creator: Hanig, David Daniel
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Treatment of Nature in Thomas Hardy's Six Major Novels (open access)

The Treatment of Nature in Thomas Hardy's Six Major Novels

The purpose of this thesis is to examine Thomas Hardy's treatment of nature in his major works. His interpretation of nature was sharply divergent from the traditional viewpoint regarding the natural world, and it was the direct antithesis of those interpretations of nature made by the writers who had preceded him.
Date: January 1959
Creator: Spann, Marjorie Williams
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Use of Art Objects in the Fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne (open access)

The Use of Art Objects in the Fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne

This study is not concerned with the evaluation of Hawthorne's artistic criticism but with the uses he made art objects in his writing. Such a study should give suggestions for interpretation of his works, as well as information concerning literary devices and technique in style. It should consider the contribution of the art objects to the literary artistry of the works in which they appear. Such a study has not previously been made.
Date: June 1959
Creator: Rodewald, Fred A.
System: The UNT Digital Library