Browsing by Subject "Mimesis in literature"
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Item Issues of representation in award-winning children's literature: Texas Bluebonnet Award, 1981-2002(Texas Tech University, 2003-12) Miller, RebeccaWolcott (1992) maintains that investigations can be driven by ideas, theories, concepts, procedures, or the desire for reform. I find myself drawn to reform-driven research because when "coupled with the act of inquiry [there] is an underlying (and presumably conscious) assumption on the part of the researcher that things are not right as they are or, most certainly, are not as good as they might be" (p. 15). Knowing, from my experience as a classroom teacher, that all students are not represented in children's literature, I felt that an in-depth investigation of that phenomenon would highlight the areas that are not as good as they might be. Because I believe that literature has the capability to offer a child the ability "to reap knowledge of the world, to fathom the resources of human spirit, to gain insights that will make his own life comprehensible" (Rosenblatt, 1976, p. 7), I felt it imperative that I understand more fully the ways in which award winning children's literature does not participate in "the struggle to recognize the multiplicity of voices and the diversity of histories and experiences of those who inhabit our nation and world" (Shapiro, 1995, p. 236). With this study, I wanted to investigate the ypes of representation presented in award-winning children's literature, particularly, the Texas Bluebonnet Award (TBA). I wanted to gain an understanding of the value society places on literature about children outside the socio-political mainstream, and the ways in which children's literature portrays or does not portray all kinds of children. Through this investigation, I also wanted to discover what the people who are responsible for choosing the Texas Bluebonnet nominated books thought of their role in the process. Essentially, the intention of this study was two-fold. I wanted to investigate the types of representation presented in awardwinning children's literature and to gain insight into the minds of the selection committees who determine which books become winners.Item Limbs of life: literature of postmodern anthropomorphic technology and cosmology(Texas Tech University, 2000-05) Kim, IlguThe postmodern's inevitable coexistence with machines changes humans into a machine-like processing entity while machines become more autonomous like humans. Especially focusing upon Artificial Intelligence, many postmodern writers deal with the newly emerging third space between human and nonhuman. This dissertation argues that as the cognitive base of human thoughts and languages, this paranormally blended space of quasi-objects (such as cyborgs) suggests the new insightful direction of paratactic postmodern culture, which in certain ways parallels anthropomorphic mythologies. As the term "matrix" means "womb" in Greek, the metaverse in postmodern cyberpunk fiction is inherently related to creation myths. If "new technologies," as Marshal .McLuhan says, "amputate as much as they amplify," postmodern science fiction writers use anthropomorphic creation myths to reunite those dismembered limbs of the natural body, the human's instinctive transpersonal subconscious. Richard Powers's Helen and Neal Stephenson's avatars are mechanical anthropomorphic technologies (Mechs in McHale's terms) whose dilemmas are allegorically reflected in their parallels with the Gilgamesh and Galatea myths. Although homogeneity is seriously criticized through Pygmalion's incestuous relation with Galatea and Bob Rife's recovery of glossolalia via a computer virus. Transcendental visions in mechanical anthropomorphic narratives are limited to a less satisfactory level. By contrast, Marge Piercy's Yod and Octavia Butler's Oankali, as the biological anthropomorphic hybrids ("biopunks" in McHale's terms) show the higher reality which is neither matter nor mind. Their parallel to creation myths, to the Gaia hypothesis and to Golem, like chaos theory, reveals that mind and matter are interdependent and correlated. While answering both "why" questions in science and "how" questions in literature, the entrapment and escapism (mostly in mechanical hybrids) as well as excitement and joy (mostly in machines of blood and flesh) of these anthropomorphic technologies are theoretically applied to some important topics in the postmodern literature of science such as the sublime, metamorphoses, information, chaos theory, allegory and linguistics. Finally, this dissertation examines the potential self-idolatry tendency in these "fractal" anthropomorphic hybrids where the finite is reflected as the small scale of the infinite. In the information-flowing society of masquerade, transcendental and sublime moments are safely illuminated by implosive personifications, such as Octavia Butler's transcultural and persistent metaphor of the humble seed.