Pitt-Greensburg's English Literature Capstone Presentations will be held on Thursday, April 21 at 5:30 PM in the Fireside Lounge, Chambers Hall. There will be six presentations, with a brief intermission and a question-and-answer session. The event will run until about 8 or 8:15 PM. Light refreshments will be provided.
Here is a preview of the presentations:
* Corey Florindi will investigate theatrical contexts, panopticism, and Irish identity reflected in the free indirect discourse of James Joyce's Dubliners.
* Corey Florindi will investigate theatrical contexts, panopticism, and Irish identity reflected in the free indirect discourse of James Joyce's Dubliners.
* Sarah O'Neil will address the intertextual relationship of Charlotte Smith and William Wordsworth, and what it can tell us about the idealized image of the Romantic poet.
* Kate Smith will discuss the challenges of shifting subjectivities in Edgar Allan Poe's and Kate Chopin's short stories.
* Jessica Rendos will consider predetermined scripts, power, and the question of liberation in Kate Chopin's The Awakening.
* Beth Smaligo will examine dialects, class status and physical bodies in transition in D. H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover.
* Brian Perry will explore the machinations of suspense through cognitive estrangement and split identities in Philip K. Dick's A Scanner Darkly.
The capstone scholars will benefit from your comments and questions as they make the final revisions to their capstone papers.
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