Keyword ["selfhood"] Result: 81 - 100 | Page: 5 of 6 |
81. | Becoming woman---becoming self---becoming other |
82. | Historicizing Renaissance selfhood: Poggio Bracciolini's practice of self -representation |
83. | Mapping, mobility, and selfhood in nineteenth-century narrative: Sir Richard F. Burton, Herman Melville, and Charles Dickens |
84. | 'Making strange': The art and science of selfhood in the works of John Banville (Ireland) |
85. | Selfhood and transcendence: Emmanuel Levinas and the origins of intersubjective moral theory, 1928--1961 |
86. | Visual violence and the loss of selfhood in Guenderrode, Hoelderlin, and Fichte (Karoline von Guenderrode, Friedrich Hoelderlin, Johann Gottlieb Fichte) |
87. | Exorcising the beloved: Problems of gender and selfhood in Marina Tsvetaeva's myths of poetic genius |
88. | The practice of the impossible: Selfhood, God, and suffering in Simone Weil and Georges Bataille |
89. | Selfhood and otherhood, or selfhood vs otherhood? Questions of interiority and exteriority in contemporary cultural theory |
90. | Habitations of goodness: Selfhood, reality, and language in the work of Iris Murdoch and James M. Gustafson |
91. | The social self: Contemporary psychology and the writings of Hawthorne, Howells, and William James |
92. | Surrogate motherhood and the quest for self in selected novels of Doris Lessing |
93. | Expressions of selfhood in classic American fiction: Readings from a Chinese cultural perspective |
94. | Across the field: Nature and selfhood in the poetry of Robert Frost |
95. | The search for selfhood in the novels of John Fowles: A Jungian interpretation |
96. | THE RECIPROCITY OF SPACE AND SELF IN FOUR NINETEENTH-CENTURY NOVELISTS: JANE AUSTEN, GEORGE ELIOT, CHARLES DICKENS, AND THOMAS HARDY |
97. | Sources of selfhood and technologies of ethical formation in early Muslim thought: The case of al-H&dotbelow;arith B. Asad al-Muh&dotbelow;asibi (d. 143/857) |
98. | Neuroscience and Galen: Body, selfhood, and the materiality of emotions on the early modern stage |
99. | Reforming the organism: Physiological individuation and the nature of political selfhood in Victorian literary culture |
100. | The Quest For Selfhood In Breast Cancer Memoirs |
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