Keyword [Early modern english] Result: 41 - 60 | Page: 3 of 4 |
41. | Remembering Mothers: Representations of Maternity in Early Modern English Literature |
42. | Reorienting Decorum: Representing and Recognizing the Foreign on the Early Modern English Stage |
43. | Georgic Reformations of the Vita Activa: The Nature of Work in Early Modern English Literature |
44. | The everyday feast: Recreational consumption and social status in early modern English drama |
45. | The Arthurian Book in Print: Reading the Debts and Desires of the Early Modern English Nation |
46. | Epic Satire: Structures of Heroic Mockery in Early Modern English Literature |
47. | Very now: Temporal aspects of melancholy in early modern English literature |
48. | Dead reckoning: Knowing and telling in Early Modern English revenge tragedies and history plays |
49. | Putting Russia on the globe: The matter of Muscovy in early modern English travel writing and literature |
50. | Idleness in early modern English literature |
51. | Silencing the Sirens: Patronage and the New World in Spenser, Daniel, and Shakespeare |
52. | Transnational genealogies: Jews, blacks and moors in early modern English and Spanish literature, 1547--1642 |
53. | Playing with the beard: The economic constitution of masculinity in early modern English children's drama |
54. | Knowing, seeing, and transcending nature: Judaic holiness and the control of nature in early modern English literature and culture |
55. | 'A time to play, a time to work': Concepts of recreation and the early modern English stage, 1567--1625 |
56. | Ideology, travell, and social change in early modern English culture |
57. | 'Least knowen and most in practice': The nature and utility of practical music in early modern English thought |
58. | 'Who stand I' th' gaps': Narrative authority in the early modern English travel play |
59. | Changing everything: Religious conversion and the limits of individual subjectivity in early modern English drama |
60. | Wailing eloquence: Sleep and dreams in early modern English literature (John Milton, Edmund Spenser, John Donne, Ben Jonson) |
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