12 research outputs found

    Global Captivities

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    Travel in “climes devout”: The romance of the Holy Land in American writing, 1790–1876

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    This dissertation explores the development of a vigorous and diverse subgenre in nineteenth-century American travel writing, that of the Holy Land travel narrative. I seek to delineate the contours of American discourse about the Holy Land during the nineteenth century by examining missionary accounts, captivity narratives, narratives of religious pilgrimages to Palestine, travel narratives in the genteel tradition, satirical counternarratives such as those by Mark Twain, John William De Forest and J. Ross Browne, and, finally, Herman Melville\u27s polyphonic treatment of the sacred landscape in his often neglected long poem Clarel. American travel writing about the Holy Land forms a coherent, if greatly varied, tradition, a tradition that is marked by a profound intertextuality with the Hebrew and Christian scriptures, British and continental travel narratives about the Holy Land, and the treatments of the Holy Land authored by other Americans. Chapter 1 develops the background for the Holy Land narratives in terms of the larger American discourse about the Middle East with particular emphasis on the genre of Barbary captivity narratives that achieved popularity in the 1790s. These narratives and fictional works provide a framework for American discussions of the Middle East that informs the development of the Holy Land genre, particularly in its ethnographic and intercultural aspects. Chapter 2 examines the travel narratives to the Holy Land composed by the pious travelers Edward Robinson, William M. Thomson, Clorinda Minor, and William C. Prime. Chapter 3 explores the more obviously skeptical and self-consciously literary narratives of John Lloyd Stephens, Bayard Taylor, George William Curtis, William Cullen Bryant, and David Dorr. Chapter 4 explores the satirical accounts of pilgrimage authored by the most iconoclastic of American travelers to the Holy Land: John W. De Forest, J. Ross Browne, and Mark Twain. Chapter 5 consists of an extended close reading of Melville\u27s long poem Clarel, which represents the culmination of the tradition of nineteenth-century American writing about the Holy Land because it gives voice explicitly to the full range of religious, political, and epistemological questions raised by the other texts

    Nineteenth-Century US Literature in Middle Eastern Languages

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    Betting on Fiction: Nation, Diaspora, Technology, and Anglophone Literary Networks in Shehan Karunatilaka’s The Legend of Pradeep Mathew

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    Shehan Karunatilaka\u27s Chinaman: The Legend of Pradeep Mathew (2010) is among the most inventive recent South Asian novels in English. The novel, built around the story of an elusive cricketer whose story is shaped by the ethnic and class conflicts of late twentieth-century Sri Lanka, provides both a guidebook to the intricacies of Sri Lankan cricket and an extended commentary on the recent history of the Sri Lankan nation. Karunatilaka makes textual and paratextual use of the internet, not merely as a means of promoting his novel, but also as a means of expanding the scope of the novelistic form

    Association Between Disease-Free Survival and Overall Survival When Survival Is Prolonged After Recurrence in Patients Receiving Cytotoxic Adjuvant Therapy for Colon Cancer: Simulations Based on the 20,800 Patient ACCENT Data Set

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    We previously validated disease-free survival (DFS) as a surrogate for overall survival (OS) in fluorouracil-based adjuvant colon cancer clinical trials. New therapies have extended survival after recurrence from 1 to approximately 2 years. We examined the possible impact of this improvement on the DFS/OS association
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