Stephen Crane's Presentation of War (open access)

Stephen Crane's Presentation of War

This thesis explores the literary career of Stephen Crane, concentrating on his war works.
Date: August 1964
Creator: Wilson, Fred E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Concept of Leadership in Modern American War Novels (open access)

The Concept of Leadership in Modern American War Novels

This thesis explores the topic of leadership through the war novels of: Styron and Uris, Jones, Mailer and Shaw, Cozzens, Hersey and Heller and finally, Wouk and Michener.
Date: August 1968
Creator: Wiggins, Stanley C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Picaresque Novel in America since World War II (open access)

The Picaresque Novel in America since World War II

This is not intended to be a definitive study of all the picaresque novels of the last two decades. It is, instead, a representative study which includes those authors who have attained the most prominence and who have contributed most to the delineation and advancement of the picaresque genre.
Date: August 1965
Creator: Shaw, Patrick W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hawthorne's Romantic Transmutation of Colonial and Revolutionary War History in Selected Tales and Romances (open access)

Hawthorne's Romantic Transmutation of Colonial and Revolutionary War History in Selected Tales and Romances

The purpose of this thesis is to examine in selected tales and romances Hawthorne's intent and the effectiveness of his transmutation of American colonial and Revolutionary War history in his fiction. This study examines the most important of Hawthorne's original sources. While indicating the relationship between fictional and historical accounts as necessary to a study of Hawthorne's romantic transmutation of history, this thesis further investigates Hawthorne's artistic reasons for altering events of the past.
Date: August 1969
Creator: Clayton, Lawrence R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Tragedy of Shakespeare's Hotspur (open access)

The Tragedy of Shakespeare's Hotspur

It seems obvious that Shakespeare was interested in Hotspur as something more than a strictly historical character. The firey character found in I Henry IV is no longer recognized as the Ill-fated rebel from Holinshed and Daniel. Holinshed offers only a spark which Shakespeare uses to build a very real flame. The events leading up to the rebellion and the rebellion itself are historical, but the name of Hotspur in Holinshed is no more outstanding than that of Worcester, Glendower, or any of the other rebels. In Shakespeare's drama no other rebel character even approaches the development of Hotspur.
Date: August 1961
Creator: Wright, Eugene Patrick, 1936-
System: The UNT Digital Library
The South in Faulkner's Novels: Myth and History (open access)

The South in Faulkner's Novels: Myth and History

The purpose of this paper is to view Faulkner's use of history from a different perspective by examining in detail the myths and historical facts with which Faulkner dealt. First, several of the prevailing myths about the Old South and the Civil War will be examined. Second, the actual historical facts will be compared and contrasted with legendary tradition. Third, and most important, several of Faulkner's works will be examined to show how he uses both the myths and historical facts to create his own "legend" of the South. Finally, Faulkner's view of the New South will be examined.
Date: January 1969
Creator: Lee, Barbara Yates
System: The UNT Digital Library
Myth in the Fiction of C. S. Lewis (open access)

Myth in the Fiction of C. S. Lewis

In both his fiction and non-fiction, Lewis comments on myth, its characteristics and strengths, and its relation to Christian doctrine. His use of myth to examine and to illustrate Christian ideas is most important in the space trilogy, the Narnia series of children's books, and Till We Have Faces. These books are the primary sources for this thesis, and they will be examined in chronological order.
Date: August 1966
Creator: Miller, Ruth Humble
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Critical Introduction to the Proletarian Novels of Alan Sillitoe (open access)

A Critical Introduction to the Proletarian Novels of Alan Sillitoe

This study seeks to analyze each of Sillitoe's proletarian novels as a separate artistic endeavor, to study each in terms of its critical reception, plot, theme, characterization, setting, and style.
Date: August 1969
Creator: Boyd, Ronald E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shakespeare's Richard III: The Sources for his Characterization and Actions in the First Tetralogy (open access)

Shakespeare's Richard III: The Sources for his Characterization and Actions in the First Tetralogy

A thorough study of the progressive development of the description of Richard in the sources of Shakespeare's play and a comparison of the results of such a study with Shakespeare's portrait may make possible a deeper and clearer understanding of the character of the man as well as some further insight into the methods of Shakespeare's art.
Date: August 1968
Creator: Bender, Connie Patterson
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of Byron's Approaches to Reality in Don Juan (open access)

A Study of Byron's Approaches to Reality in Don Juan

Don Juan was Byron's effort to come to terms with the reality of his own environment, and he demanded the liberty to try to understand life and to present his conclusions without editorial or social oppression. It is an examination of the problem of appearance and reality; as a satire, the poem attacks appearances maintained by hypocrisy by placing them against the background of reality which is apparent to Byron.
Date: August 1968
Creator: Sircy, Otice C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Indian Figure in James Fenimore Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans and William Gilmore Simm's The Yemassee (open access)

The Indian Figure in James Fenimore Cooper's The Last of the Mohicans and William Gilmore Simm's The Yemassee

Though it is important to establish the authenticity of Cooper's and Simm's thematic and historical Indians, it is more important to show that the writers were accurate in their delineation of the customs, personalities, and thoughts of the Indian tribes represented in the two books.
Date: August 1969
Creator: Maness, Ella Mae
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Comparison of Christopher Marlowe's Edward II and William Shakespeare's Richard II (open access)

A Comparison of Christopher Marlowe's Edward II and William Shakespeare's Richard II

This study purports to examine several areas of similarity between the chronicle history plays by Christopher Marlowe and William Shakespeare. Edward II and Richard II are alike in many ways, most strikingly in the similarity of the stories themselves. But this is a superficial likeness, for there are many other likenesses--in purpose, in artistry, in language--which demonstrate more clearly than the parallel events of history the remarkable degree to which these plays resemble each other.
Date: January 1960
Creator: Ford, Howard Lee
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dominant Themes in the Novels of Ernest Hemingway (open access)

Dominant Themes in the Novels of Ernest Hemingway

This thesis proposes to show that Hemingway's novels reveal a change of attitude which culminates in an increased faith in the ultimate goodness and dignity of man.
Date: January 1961
Creator: Davis, James Bert
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Complex of Religious Beliefs as Found in the Life and  Works of Lord Byron (open access)

A Complex of Religious Beliefs as Found in the Life and Works of Lord Byron

The purpose of this thesis is to make an unbiased presentation of the many facets of Byron's religious beliefs.
Date: August 1967
Creator: Roueche, Suanne D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Themes in the Edwardian Political Novel (open access)

Themes in the Edwardian Political Novel

The purpose of this study is to record the political attitudes of the major Edwardian novelists as they surveyed their contemporary world, diagnosed its maladies, offered suggestions for reform, and attempted to predict the course political life would take in the future.
Date: January 1962
Creator: Widmann, Ionia M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Appraisal of Structures and Point of View in the Novels of William Styron (open access)

An Appraisal of Structures and Point of View in the Novels of William Styron

This paper, then, purposes to examine these two characteristics of Styron's novel form--structure and point of view--as they are handled in his major works, the novels Lie Down in Darkness and Set This House on Fire, and the novella The Long March.
Date: June 1962
Creator: Merril, Charles S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tennessee Williams as a Social Critic (open access)

Tennessee Williams as a Social Critic

The purpose of this study is to examine the social criticism of Williams by careful analysis of six of his full length plays: The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcar Named Desire, Camino Real, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Suddenly Last Summer, and The Night of the Iguana. After the analyses of the plays, the final chapter of this study will deal with the playwright's comments on specific aspects of the social order and will not be confined to the six major plays under consideration.
Date: May 1969
Creator: Peterson, Janet M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dostoevsky and the Irresistible Idea (open access)

Dostoevsky and the Irresistible Idea

The primary goal of this paper is to investigate the phenomenon of a dream, a desire, or an idea transpiring in the thoughts of an individual, growing in importance to the individual, and finally becoming an idée fixe, or irresistible idea, which cannot be suppressed by the individual. The investigation will be concerned with the two of Dostoevsky's heroes who best exemplify the phenomenon.
Date: January 1968
Creator: Jones, Kenneth R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dostoyevsky: a Resource for Modern Youth (open access)

Dostoyevsky: a Resource for Modern Youth

This thesis looks at two questions regarding the teaching of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's works in high school and junior college: which of Dostoyevsky's works should be used, and what materials in those works selected should one consider most necessary for emphasis in the actual teaching of the works.
Date: August 1969
Creator: Porcher, Robert D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Devil in Legend and Literature (open access)

The Devil in Legend and Literature

The purpose of this paper is to trace some of the accepted characteristics of the devil to their origins through a study of folklore and ancient religions. The characteristics include the principal form taken by each devil and trace its beginnings through folklore; the animals connected with these devils; powers allotted to these devils; and purposes served by these devils.
Date: January 1962
Creator: Dorman, Artell F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Existential Predicament as Theme in the Novels of Alberto Moravia (open access)

The Existential Predicament as Theme in the Novels of Alberto Moravia

The phrase "existential predicament" is a summary of Moravia's preoccupation as a novelist. In his fiction there is constant, unrelenting obsession with the situation of a single, particular character confronting, through his own existence in a physical, historical setting, the forces or powers of negation which threaten him with the frightening personal awareness of the possibility, even inevitability, of his own dissolution into nothingness.
Date: August 1965
Creator: Young, Gene Herman
System: The UNT Digital Library
Religion in the Works of Nikos Kazantzakis (open access)

Religion in the Works of Nikos Kazantzakis

This thesis is a study of religion in the works of Nikos Kazantzakis.
Date: August 1967
Creator: Gebhard, Leila
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Awareness of Evil in the Works of J. D. Salinger (open access)

The Awareness of Evil in the Works of J. D. Salinger

The present study will discuss J. D. Salinger's alienated misfits in direct relation to the psychology of the gifted, creative individual. By analyzing Seymour, Holden and Franny as representatives of a specific intellectual type, this study will provide the reader with a fresh insight into J. D. Salinger's fictional world.
Date: August 1964
Creator: Harp, James T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Role of History in Kenneth Roberts' Novels (open access)

The Role of History in Kenneth Roberts' Novels

The purpose of this thesis is to evaluate Kenneth Roberts' transmutation of American history into living literature. This examination will cover the following novels: Arundel (1929), The Lively Lady (1931), Rabble in Arms (1933), Captain Caution (1934), Northwest Passage (1937), Oliver Wiswell (1940), and Lydia Bailey (1947).
Date: January 1969
Creator: Harris, F. Janet
System: The UNT Digital Library