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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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