Lorrie Moore Essays
Defining Trauma and How it Spreads: Assessing 'Maus' and 'People Like That Are the Only People Here' College
Birds of America
‘Trauma’ is a loaded word, as there is such a range of events which can cause a trauma, and also such a range of possible reactions to the trauma. Naomi Morgenstern wrote that “[t]rauma…is a theoretical figure for the insistence of history (its...
One Moore Voice: The Maturing Voice of Lorrie Moore's Characters in Birds of America
Birds of America
From the satirical, biting wit of a "been there, done that," college co-ed to the death-defeating witticisms of a middle-aged mother, the monologic voice in Lorrie Moore's fiction hasn't changed as much as it has matured in the years separating...
Price of Freedom: An Analysis of the Motivations of Different Tennessee Williams Characters with Respect to Aristotelian Definitions of Character and the Struggle between Duty and Desire College
Birds of America
Tennessee Williams’s paradoxical nature as an individual can be seen at many different points throughout his life. Described as “enigmatic” by both his contemporaries and biographers, the prolific playwright seems to have translated this quality...
Forming Relationships Around Loss: Analysis of Ishiguro's 'Never Let Me Go' and Moore's "Wings" College
Bark: Stories
The familial relationships navigated in Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go and Lorrie Moore’s Bark are non-traditional and complex. In Never Let Me Go, the reader is introduced to characters who are copies of other human beings, made specifically to be...