From: Cervantes: Bulletin of the Cervantes Society of America, 23.1 (2003): 61-62. Copyright © 2003, The Cervantes Society of America. THESES DIRECTED BY JOHN JAY ALLEN Mancing, Howard. “Chivalric Language and Style in Don Quijote.” Ph.D., University of Florida, 1970. Morales, Yolanda. “‘El curioso impertinente’ y ‘El celoso estreme- 61 62 JOHN JAY ALLEN Cervantes ño.’” M.A., University of Florida, 1970. Pelayo, Emily Reitz. “Cervantes y la polémica de las armas y las letras.” Ph.D., University of Florida, 1972. Squire, Donald Hovmand. “Cervantes’ La Galatea and Persiles y Sigismunda: A Frequency Analysis of Selected Features of Language and Style.” Ph.D., University of Florida, 1972. Stackhouse, Kenneth Allen. “Narrative Roles and Styles in the Novelas of María de Zayas y Sotomayor.” Ph.D., University of Florida, 1972. Young, Gerald Paul. “Imagery in Quevedo’s Love Poetry.” Ph.D., University of Florida, 1974. Hernández, Óscar Francisco. “Acercamiento al Quijote a través de los principios de Heinrich Wölfflin.” Ph.D., University of Florida, 1975. Hacthoun, Augusto, “Teoría literaria del Siglo de Oro: los teóricos puros.” Ph.D., University of Florida, 1978. Thomason, Phillip Brian. “The Coliseo de la Cruz : Madrid's First Enclosed Municipal Playhouse (1737–1859).” Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1987. Sánchez Imizcoz, Ruth. “El teatro menor en la España del siglo XVII: la contribución de Agustín Moreto.” Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1994. Bulger-Barnett, Kathleen D. “The Discovery Space in the Comedias of Pedro Calderón de la Barca.” Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1995. Daniels, Mary Blythe. “Re-visioning Gender on the SeventeenthCentury Spanish Stage: A Study of Actresses and Autoras.” Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1998. McGrath, Michael Joseph. “Dramatic Activity in SeventeenthCentury Segovia: Study and Documents.” Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1998. Groundland, Mark. “I am presently still directing Mark Groundland's dissertation in progress, on colonial hybridity in the literary portrayal of the morisco in selected Golden Age texts, including those of Cervantes” (email, March 19, 2003).