Keyword [British literature] Result: 61 - 80 | Page: 4 of 5 |
61. | Men and women in motion: Mobility and fixity in eighteenth-century British literature (Samuel Pepys, Mary Wortley, Lady Montagu, Daniel Defoe, Jane Austen, Mary Wollstonecraft) |
62. | The progress narrative in eighteenth-century British literature (William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, Charlotte Dacre) |
63. | Cities of affluence and anger: Urbanism and social class in twentieth century British literature (E. M. Forster, Evelyn Waugh, Doris Lessing, Joseph Conrad, Salman Rushdie, Zimbabwe, India) |
64. | 'Savage warnings and notations': Wartime visions, cultural blackouts and the crisis of British literature, 1939--1949 |
65. | 'Dying of one's neighbours': Constructions of suburban anxieties in British literature, 1850--1880 |
66. | Writing culture: British literature and cultural theory in the fifties |
67. | Ancestral voices: Maria Edgeworth and other orphans of British literature (William Wordsworth, Sir Walter Scott, Scotland, Sydney, Lady Morgan, Jane Austen) |
68. | Bastards and foundlings: Infanticide, illegitimacy, and gender in eighteenth-century British literature |
69. | 'Homely adventures': Domesticity, travel, and the gender economy of colonial difference in eighteenth-century British literature (Daniel Defoe, Jane Austen, Anna Maria Falconbridge, Richard Cumberland) |
70. | Representations of naval impressment in eighteenth-century British literature |
71. | 'The awful facts': Figurations of the worker in nineteenth-century British literature (Elizabeth Gaskell, James Kay) |
72. | Working class autobiography and middle class writers: Fictive representations of the working classes in nineteenth century British literature |
73. | Chivalry and nostalgia: British literature and national identity, 1820-1845 |
74. | From the temple to the castle: An architectural history of eighteenth-century British literature |
75. | A content analysis of selected World War II-related juvenile fiction by American and British authors |
76. | Policing Parnassus: The struggle to delineate, protect and contain the realm of the imagination in early eighteenth century British literature |
77. | 'The continually increasing multitude': Class anxiety and the masses in nineteenth century British literature |
78. | Undead Empire: How Folklore Animates the Human Corpse in Nineteenth-Century British Literature |
79. | Cosmopolitan criminality in modern British literature |
80. | 'Dying Worlds': Environment, Ecology, and Empire in British Literature 1878-191 |
|