Lordship, Bondage, and Self-Fashioning in the Early Modern Tragedy: Identity as Self-Mastery, Identity as Subjection in "King Lear," "Doctor Faustus," and "Othello"
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Disruption of a Cultural Identity: An Examination of Lakota Identity
Anderson, Amy, 1980- (2001)In discussing the present situation of Native Americans in the United States, it is important to understand the extent to which government policies have been inflicted upon Indians, specifically the Lakota, in the past as ... -
Veiled Identities: Arab American Gender Identities Throughout the Twentieth Century
Al-Dookhi, Alyssa Bader Abdullatif Farhan (2009)Arabs have been immigrating to the United States since the late nineteenth century, and there are approximately 850,000 people of Arab ancestry living there today. Arabs arrived in the U.S. in two major waves; the first ... -
The Formation of Personal Identity: Environmental Influences and Opportunities that Affect Self-Definition throughout Adolescence
Mequio, Sarah (2008)Human beings appear to be the only species that anguish over the question, 'Who am I' In order to make sense of personality characteristics and behaviors and find some kind of fundamental sense of our being, one uses ...