Beschreibung
compiles fifteen in-depth, scholarly, and original essays on death and dying in literature from around the globe and from different time periods. Written from a variety of critical perspectives, the essays target both scholars and serious students.
Autorenportrait
John J. Han is Professor of English and Creative Writing at Missouri Baptist University, where he also chairs the Humanities Division. He is the editor of
(2011) and serves as editor of
and
His articles have appeared in many journals and essay collections, such as
and
Author of five haiku collections, he has also published poems in periodicals and anthologies worldwide, including
and
He earned his MA and his PhD from Kansas State University and the University of Nebraska – Lincoln, respectively.
C. Clark Triplett is Vice President for Graduate Studies and Academic Program Review and Professor of Psychology/Sociology at Missouri Baptist University. He earned an AA from Hannibal-LaGrange College, a BA from Southwest Baptist University, an MDiv. from Covenant Theological Seminary, an MSEd from Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, and a PhD from Saint Louis University. He also studied at Concordia Seminary, the University of Ulster in Northern Ireland, and the Harvard Institutes. A licensed counselor, he has published academic articles and book reviews in
Inhalt
Contents: Carol Leff: Gravesites in the Stories of Herman Charles Bosman: An Exploration of History, Memory, Ritual, Identity, and Landscape – Colin Yeo: «Mouthed Graves Will Give Thee Memory»: Burial Sites and Poetic Immortality in Renaissance Verse – Marwan A. Nader/Myrna A. Nader: Christian and Muslim Concepts of Death and the Afterlife in Postmodern Agnostic Poetry – Heather H. Yeung: The End of Language? Representations and Effects of Death and Dying in the Fiction of Julia Kristeva and Susan Sontag – Daniela Chana: Death as an Instrument for Social Criticism in Young Italian Literature – John Pennington: The Secret Garden at the Back of the North Wind: The Life and Death Journey in Frances Hodgson Burnett and George MacDonald – Rebekah M. Fowler: How Men Grieve: A Contemporary Allegory of the Grieving Process in Sir Orfeo – Carolyn Ownbey: Haunting and Melancholia: A Reading of the Revenant in Seamus Heaney’s «Casualty» – Kelly Leavitt: Those Left Behind: The Non-Endings of Primo Levi’s If This Is a Man and Aharon Appelfeld’s The Immortal Bartfuss – Hannah Farrell: In The Driver’s Seat: Death and Isolation in Muriel Spark’s Postmodern Gothic – Claudia Desblaches: Death and Dying as Literary Devices in Brite’s Exquisite Corpse and Palahniuk’s Damned – Lori F. Smurthwaite: «Stories Can Save Us»: Rewriting Death in Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried – James Brown: Tears and the Art of – John J. Han: Quick and Long-Lasting: Death and Dying in John Steinbeck’s Fiction – Debra L. Cumberland: Death-Defying Women: Art and Transcendence in Cather.