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Keyword [British literature]
Result: 41 - 60 | Page: 3 of 5
41. Bower of Books: Reading Children in Nineteenth-Century British Literature
42. The Infant Phenomenon: Shakespeare, the Mimetic Child, and Nineteenth-Century British Literature
43. Gambling on empire: Colonial India and the rhetoric of 'speculation' in British literature and culture, c.1769-1830
44. There is a wound in that wall: Representations of Islam in selected works of nineteenth-century British literature
45. The Limits of Sympathy: Animals and Sentimentality in Eighteenth-Century British Literature and Culture, 1759--1810
46. Anchor or anchorite? The battle for the meaning of monasticism in British literature, 1770--1850
47. The Making and the Unmaking of the Modern Subject in British Literature of the Long Eighteenth Century
48. Addicted subjects: Crime, aesthetics, and British literature
49. From virtue to sympathy: Perspectives in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British literature on the disintegration of the social bond
50. Garden, plate, and den: The Chinese aesthetic in nineteenth-century British literature and visual culture
51. Occult invention: The rebirth of rhetorical heuresis in early modern British literature from Chapman to Swift
52. 'Not Within the Compass of Reason': The Character of 'The Enthusiast' In Eighteenth-Century British Literature
53. Utopianism and form in fin-de-siecle British literature
54. The development of the rebellion novel genre in nineteenth century British literature
55. Natural Kinds: Botany, Aesthetics, and the Taxonomy of Families in British Literature, 1760--1807
56. Fictions of nature: Ecology, science, and culture in twentieth-century British literature
57. At home in the city: Cosmopolitanism, urban spectacle and Utopia in British literature, 1850--1925
58. A survey of female characters as flaneuses and their interactions with modernity in early modern British literature
59. Domestic counterplots: Representations of marriage in eighteenth-century British literature
60. 'The rubicon of female virtue': Dividing and uniting women in eighteenth-century British literature
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