Honors Theses

Author/Title Research Type Related Fields
Tamar Leveson Reading Pregnancy as Liminality in Modernist British Fiction Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Cen Wei. Chinese International Students in American Colleges: Origin, Process, and Influence. 2018 Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Collin Sprenkle. Fly Fishing and the Female Form: Meditations and Investigations into the Corporeal Transformations Experienced in the River. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Jazzy Hothi. "I am Here: Illuminating Black Women’s Resistances to Individualistic Notions of Self-Care," 2018. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Elise Stefanou.Demonic Liminality: Unsettling an Anthropological Concept Through the Work of Sylvia Wynter, 2018. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Sam Wooley. “We gon’ see the future first”: Subjection, Melancholy, and Queer Utopian Aesthetics in Frank Ocean’s Blonde, 2018. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Stephen Joseph Connelly. "Progress, War, and the Eternal Return: Reflections on Time within the Fantasies of J.R.R. Tolkien and E.R. Eddison.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Adam Nathan Kirstein. "Tarzan Of The Apologists: The Burroughsian Evolutionary Paradox, and Anthropocentric Contradictions Fuelling Cultural, Iconographic Prevalence of The Ape-Man.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Elizabeth Ann Strehlo. "The aloe that flowers once in a hundred years': Identification and idealization in Austen & Brontë.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Victoria Sinan Duan. "Form and Traumatic Remembrance in Toni Morrison's Beloved: A Percolation on Stream of Consciousness Models of Presenting Interior Monologues.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Maisie Alexandra Leese. "Female Re-Orientation Abroad: Considering the modern woman's potential to reclaim travel in the Middle East.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Elizabeth Li Tao. "Keeping up with the beat: The inclusion of slang terms through hip hop music into the American-English lexicon.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Isabelle Aelis Ragail Edwards. "A Critical Eye: The Reading of Letters in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Michael Therett Lewis. "Memetic Brick and Mortar: The Architectural Landscape of W.G. Sebald's Austerlitz.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Maya Devery Trachtenberg. "California: a modernist utopia.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Danielle Marie Gintz. "Narrativizing the Mind: Implications of the Printed Text and Oral Story on William James' Consciousness.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Dylan Teague McDonald. "'The disguise, I fear, is thin. But listen:' Buck Mulligan as Ulysses' master of ceremonies.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Rourke David van Zile. Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Kelsey Jessamine Hoag. "Hope for the American Poetry Teacher.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Madison Kathryn O'Connell. "The Effect of Heteronormativity in American Culture on Transgender Terminology.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Steven Trey Wallace. Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Michael Warren Bagby. "Rhetorical Devices as Social Action: Great Expectations as a Performative Text.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Carlee Ann Horst. "Creating an Empowering Classroom Discourse on Gender through Great Expectations.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
Kaija Catherine Perkiomaki. "Little Girls and Big Men: The Romance Narrative Explored Through the Sexual Coding of the Vampire Fantasy's Hero and Heroine.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses
David Jin Yi. "Too Good to be True: The Unraveling of John Kwang in Native Speaker.". Honors Thesis, University of Washington. 2015. Undergraduate, Honors Theses