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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 3 years, 1 month ago
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John Stephenson deposited “Excrement, Blood, and Flowers”: Visceral Imagery in Djuna Barnes’s “Nightwood” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 6 months ago
A brief analysis of depictions of dirt and the body in Djuna Barnes’s 1937 novel “Nightwood”, assessing the interrelation with emotion and identity.
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John Stephenson deposited “To Lie Beside a Leper”: Dirt, Disease, and Defilement in Rainer Maria Rilke’s “The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 7 months ago
Rilke’s engagement with the abject (Kristeva) through the writer of the “Notebooks” is examined in the context of modernity’s attempt to purify and order reality.
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John Stephenson deposited “Heathens! Bloody Heathens!”: Postcolonial Gothic in “The Wicker Man” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
Despite its B-movie release in 1973, “The Wicker Man” now ranks in the top one hundred twentieth-century British films. Depicting a clash between Christianity and pagan belief systems, the film raises perplexing questions concerning morality and cultural domination. The remote Scottish island community that has regressed to pagan barbarity…[Read more]
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John Stephenson deposited “The Land of Matters Unforgot”: North and South, Past and Present in William Morris’s “The Earthly Paradise” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
Nineteenth century British writers and artists looked back to, and in some cases attempted to claim a cultural heritage not their own. Rather than appealing to the indigenous Germanic and Celtic mythos, the literature, art, and culture of Ancient Greece provided a palliative to contemporary anxieties regarding social order, cultural achievement,…[Read more]
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John Stephenson deposited “Oft, In Lonely Rooms”: Wordsworth’s Self-Pleasuring “Tintern Abbey” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey” is in essence an exploration of the poet’s internal transformation in relation to the natural landscape and the memory of landscape. This process of maturation enables Wordsworth to experience and reflect upon nature’s beauty rather than simply enjoy its immediate sensation. The poem’s emphasis on pleasure derived fro…[Read more]
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John Stephenson deposited “Picking Daffodils with Auntie Wordsworth”: Class, Intellect, and Virility in John Osborne’s “Look Back In Anger” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
The paper argues that the obvious class conflict characterizing John Osborne’s “Look Back in Anger” is inseparable from and complicated by considerations of education/intellect and masculinity/virility, and relatedly that Osborne’s designation as an “Angry Young Man” intertwines with the work’s manifestations as text and performance. Two dramati…[Read more]
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John Stephenson deposited “Our Wild Forest-Land”: England(s) and Love in Hawthorne’s “The Scarlet Letter” on Humanities Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
This paper briefly examines the (New) English identities of the primary characters in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “The Scarlett Letter”, suggesting that their individual negotiations of landscape and homeland are are, like the ties of love between them, complex and contradictory.
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 8 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 6 years, 10 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 5 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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John Stephenson deposited “Neither mickling nor muckling” Northern Reflexivity in the Novels of the British “New Wave” on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
This study proposes that the novels associated with the early 1960s cinematic “British New Wave,” though popularly representative of Northern England, have suffered from under-reading with respect to place-specific identity. Contemporary journalistic construction of the “angry young man,” and subsequent working class-focused analyses obscure…[Read more]
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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John Stephenson's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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John Stephenson changed their profile picture on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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