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Keyword [Charlotte]
Result: 101 - 120 | Page: 6 of 8
101. An ethics of becoming: Configurations of feminine subjectivity in Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte, and George Eliot
102. Reiteration as resistance: Performativity in the novels of Charlotte Yonge, George Eliot, and Margaret Oliphant
103. Held captive to a picture: Visual experience in nineteenth-century texts and early film (Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, John Ruskin, Sir Alfred Hitchcock)
104. Hidden monstrosities: The transformation of woman and child victim(izer)s in nineteenth-century gothic fiction (Elizabeth Gaskell, Charlotte Bronte, Henry James)
105. Interdisciplinary insights into paleoenvironments of the Queen Charlotte Islands/Hecate Strait region
106. La litterature et la memoire des camps nazis chez Jorge Semprun, Marguerite Duras et Charlotte Delbo (France, Spain, French text)
107. 'Play with the stories a little while': Mobility of mind in short fictions by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Kate Chopin, George Egerton and Sarah Grand
108. Maidenly amusements: Narrating female sexuality in eighteenth-century England (Mary Davys, Eliza Haywood, Charlotte Lennox, Frances Burney, Samuel Richardson)
109. Histories of the real: Aesthetics and historiography in the Victorian novel (Thomas Carlyle, Charles Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot)
110. The progress narrative in eighteenth-century British literature (William Godwin, Mary Wollstonecraft, Charlotte Dacre)
111. Beauty and the body in the fiction of Charlotte Bronte, Lewis Carroll, and Sarah Grand
112. The Romantic era literary preface (William Wordsworth, Charlotte Smith, Sir Walter Scott, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Shelley, John Clare)
113. Victorian hagiography and feminine self-fashioning (Christina Rossetti, Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot)
114. 'Art's a service': Women's philanthropy and the role of the author in mid-Victorian England (Charles Dickens, Charlotte Yonge, Charlotte Tucker, Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
115. 'Unsex'd' texts: History, hypertext and Romantic women writers (Catharine Macaulay, Helen Maria Williams, Charlotte Smith, Sydney Owenson)
116. Doctoring the text: Therapeutic realism in nineteenth-century American literature (Nathaniel Hawthorne, Oliver Wendell Holmes, S. Weir Mitchell, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Henry James)
117. Resisting the allegory: Writing the self in the novels of Charlotte Bronte
118. Artists, celebrities, and reformers: American women literary autobiographers in the 1930s (Edith Wharton, Gertrude Atherton, Mary Austin, Charlotte Perkins Gilman)
119. Reading the Bronte body: Disease, desire, and the constraints of culture (Anne Bronte, Charlotte Bronte, Emily Bronte)
120. Toward an ecriture feminine: A study of the utopian novels of Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Rokeya Sakhawat Hussain as pioneering endeavors in establishing a feminine literary tradition
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