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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