Keyword [Angela carter] Result: 61 - 80 | Page: 4 of 5 |
61. | An Interpretation Of Female Identity In The Bloody Chamber And Other Stories And Wise Children |
62. | Constructing A Separatist Utopia |
63. | A Study On Post-modernist Uncertainty As Reflected In The Infernal Desire Machines Of Doctor Hoffman |
64. | The Construction Of Female Subjectivity In Wise Children |
65. | The Grotesque In Angela Carter's The Infernal Desire Machines Of Doctor Hoffman |
66. | The Power Of A Detour—The Progression In Angela Carter's "The Bloody Chamber" |
67. | Construction Of Feminist Narrative Authority In Angela Carter's Nights At The Circus |
68. | The Research On Female Initiation Themes In The Short Stories Of Angela Carter |
69. | 'A highly ambiguous condition': The transgender subject, experimental narrative and trans-reading identity in the fiction of Virginia Woolf, Angela Carter, and Jeanette Winterson |
70. | On the outside looking in: Confessional discourse in the contemporary British novel (A. S. Byatt, Angela Carter, Pat Barker) |
71. | Gender and Hybridity in the Works of Angela Carter |
72. | Paths towards self-discovery: Transitional objects and intersubjectivity in four late-twentieth-century British novels (Julian Barnes, A. S. Byatt, Angela Carter, John Fowles) |
73. | Cyborg revolutions: Towards a postfeminist ethics with Angela Carter, Michel Foucault, Luce Irigaray and Donna Haraway |
74. | Structure and ideology in the works of Angela Carter and Rikki Ducornet: Writing from postmodernity (Spanish text) |
75. | Double trouble: Romantic idealism in the novels of Mary Shelley, Emily Bronte, and Angela Carter |
76. | Performing (and) identity in Angela Carter's 'Nights at the Circus' and 'Wise Children' |
77. | Synthetic authenticity: The work of Angela Carter, Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari |
78. | Angela Carter's feminist grotesque |
79. | ''T'Ain't No Sin': Sex and desire in the fiction of Angela Carter |
80. | Horrifying women, terrifying men: A gender-based study of sexual horror in the fiction of Robert Aickman, John Hawkes, Angela Carter, and Joyce Carol Oates, 1965-1980 |
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