Keyword [Charlotte] Result: 81 - 100 | Page: 5 of 8 |
81. | The Victorian outcast: A study of Charlotte Bronte's 'Jane Eyre' and George Eliot's 'Silas Marner' |
82. | Reading trauma in postmodern and postcolonial literature: Charlotte Delbo, Toni Morrison, and the literary imagination of the aftermath |
83. | The death of virtue: Charlotte Dacre's critique of ideals of the feminine |
84. | Screaming across the pond: A pairing of selected works by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Virginia Woolf |
85. | Borrowed authority, satirized genre: Appropriations of Shakespeare in Charlotte Smith's poetry and novels |
86. | Writing from life: Women and economics in the short fiction of Charlotte Perkins Gilman |
87. | 'Reader, I married him': The spiritually responsible heroine in Charlotte Bronte, Anne Bronte, and George Eliot |
88. | Unfamilial bonds: Technological fiction and the reimagination of gender (Donna Haraway, Mary Shelley, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, C. L. Moore, Judith Merril) |
89. | Reverie, reading, and the Victorian novel (Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, George Eliot, England) |
90. | 'The world, our home': The rhetorical vision of women's clubs in American literature, 1870--1920 (Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Kate Chopin, Sarah Orne Jewett, Willa Cather, Mary Austin) |
91. | Looking for the gaze of love: Paranoia, hysteria, and the masochism in the Gothic (Charlotte Dacre, Charlotte Bronte, Ann Sophia Radcliffe, Shirley Jackson) |
92. | 'Strange contrasts': Intersubjectivity and the cohesion of romance in the novels of Charlotte Bronte and Jean Rhys (Dominica) |
93. | Die Mensch-Maschine: Technologies of replication and reproduction in German-language literature and culture (E. T. A. Hoffmann, Charlotte Kerner, Fritz Lang, H. R. Giger, Donna Haraway) |
94. | Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Naturalist playwright |
95. | Distribution, Habitat Use, and Movements of Juvenile Smalltooth Sawfish, Pristis pectinata, in the Charlotte Harbor Estuarine System, Florida |
96. | 'Sex in mind': The gendered brain in nineteenth-century literature and mental sciences (Charlotte Bronte, Wilkie Collins, Thomas Hardy) |
97. | Female oppression and aspiration in selected nineteenth-century novels by Elizabeth Gaskell, Charlotte Bronte, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps |
98. | The novel and the conservative: The politics of early American women's fiction (Susanna Haswell Rowson, Hannah Webster Foster, Tabitha Tennay, Frances Burney, Charlotte Ramsay Lennox) |
99. | Belated travelers and posthumous children: Phantoms of Romanticism in Victorian literature (Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte, Charles Dickens) |
100. | Charlotte Bronte: Rewriting the female character |
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