Browsing by Subject "Literature, English."
Now showing items 21-40 of 40
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New uses of old dramas: The importance of Jacobean drama to plays by four contemporary British playwrights.
(Dalhousie University, 1994) -
Nomads and nomadologies: Transformations of the primitive in twentieth-century theory and culture.
(Dalhousie University, 2003) -
Open address from the guild plays to Shakespeare.
(Dalhousie University, 1998) -
The passions of Sir Gawain: Patience and the idiom of medieval romance in England.
(Dalhousie University, 2007) -
Performing the self in camera: Charlotte Bronte, the camera obscura and the protocols of female self-enactment.
(Dalhousie University, 1997) -
The question of "Englishness": Identity, culture, class and gender in the novels of Margaret Drabble.
(Dalhousie University, 1998) -
Reading for the moral: The ethics of exemplarity in Middle English literature.
(Dalhousie University, 2002) -
Reading George Eliot reading Shakespeare.
(Dalhousie University, 1990) -
Resonant genres and intertexts in the neo-slave narratives of Caryl Phillips, Octavia Butler, and Lawrence Hill.
(Dalhousie University, 2006) -
A revaluation of values: Joseph Conrad's novels as a criticism of the nineteenth century.
(Dalhousie University, 2005) -
Shakespeare, Foxe and the idea of enormity in the English chronicle plays.
(Dalhousie University, 2006) -
Significant silences and muted machines: Textile tropes in British literature around the Industrial Revolution.
(Dalhousie University, 2000) -
Single blessedness: Representations of the spinster in Charlotte Bronte, Wilkie Collins and selected periodical essays.
(Dalhousie University, 2001) -
"Spleen spreads his dominion": Cultural, literary, and medical representations of hysteria, 1670--1810.
(Dalhousie University, 2007) -
Strategies of resistance in selected Renaissance writers.
(Dalhousie University, 1992) -
"Unnoticed in the casual light of day": Philip Larkin and the plain style.
(Dalhousie University, 2003) -
Unparadised women: Royal mistresses in early modern English literature.
(Dalhousie University, 1994) -
'Visionary dreariness': Readings in Romanticism's quotidian sublime.
(Dalhousie University, 2004) -
Women writing of divinest things: Rhetoric and the early modern poet.
(Dalhousie University, 2002) -
"The yet unsayable": The limitations of knowledge in the poetry of Robert Graves.
(Dalhousie University, 1993)