Degree Department

Language

Homeland/Split (open access)

Homeland/Split

A collection of creative non-fiction essays that document the life of an Indian American immigrant.
Date: December 2018
Creator: Wagle, Jaya
System: The UNT Digital Library
Jeff Pickell: New and Selected (open access)

Jeff Pickell: New and Selected

A collection of prose.
Date: December 2018
Creator: Pickell, Jeffrey A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lollardy and Eschatology: English Literature c. 1380-1430 (open access)

Lollardy and Eschatology: English Literature c. 1380-1430

In this dissertation, I examine the various ways in which medieval authors used the term "lollard" to mean something other than "Wycliffite." In the case of William Langland's Piers Plowman, I trace the usage of the lollard-trope through the C-text and link it to Langland's dependence on the Parable of the Wheat and the Tares. Regarding Chaucer's Parson's Tale, I establish the orthodoxy of the tale's speaker by comparing his tale to contemporaneous texts of varying orthodoxy, and I link the Parson's being referred to as a "lollard" to the eschatological message of his tale. In the chapter on The Book of Margery Kempe, I examine that the overemphasis on Margery's potential Wycliffism causes everyone in The Book to overlook her heretical views on universal salvation. Finally, in comparing some of John Lydgate's minor poems with the macaronic sermons of Oxford, MS Bodley 649, I establish the orthodox character of late-medieval English anti-Wycliffism that these disparate works share. In all, this dissertation points up the eschatological character of the lollard-trope and looks at the various ends to which medieval authors deployed it.
Date: December 2018
Creator: Regetz, Timothy
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rearranging an Infinite Universe: Literary Misprision and Manipulations of Space and Time, 1750-1850 (open access)

Rearranging an Infinite Universe: Literary Misprision and Manipulations of Space and Time, 1750-1850

This project explores the intersection of literature and science from the mid-eighteenth century to the mid-nineteenth century in the context of this shift in conceptions of space and time. Confronted with the rapid and immense expansion of space and time, eighteenth and nineteenth-century philosophers and authors sought to locate humans' relative position in the vast void. Furthermore, their attempts to spatially and temporally map the universe led to changes in perceptions of the relationship between the exterior world and the interior self. In this dissertation I focus on a few important textual monuments that serve as landmarks on this journey. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the intersection of literary and scientific texts transformed perceptions of space and time. These transformations then led to further advancements in the way scientific knowledge was articulated. Imagination became central to scientific writing at the same time it came to dominate literary writing. My project explores these intersecting influences among literature, astronomy, cosmology, and geology, on the perceptions of expanding space and time.
Date: December 2018
Creator: Tatum, Brian Shane
System: The UNT Digital Library