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Keyword [Lewis]
Result: 121 - 140 | Page: 7 of 8
121. Closed fists, open hands: Literary modernism and the rhetorics of protofascism and radical humanism (Wyndam Lewis, Rebecca West, T. E. Hulme, Ezra Pound)
122. The theodicy of C. S. Lewis: A Christian defense of a good God in a world of evil and suffering
123. Phenomenological influences in the writings of C. S. Lewis
124. 'Each man was a perfect cog; each held a flame within': Manhood in London, Lewis, Wharton, and the Curtis magazines
125. Camp Lewis, 1917-1919: Progressivism, patriotism, and the First World War
126. A visible chaos: Conflicted exchanges in Anglo-American modernism (Hilda Doolittle, Virginia Woolf, Dora Marsden, Wyndham Lewis, H.D.)
127. Ingenious devices: Engineering fictions and American technophilia, 1900--1940 (Sinclair Lewis, John Dos Passos, Willa Cather)
128. Howells, Dickinson, Lewis: An exercise in reading the interracial canon
129. Sinclair Lewis's Kansas City laboratory: The genesis of 'Elmer Gantry'
130. The women of Narnia: A study of C. S. Lewis's treatment of female characters in 'The Chronicles of Narnia'
131. Prosthetic fictions: Cold modernism in Wyndham Lewis, Mina Loy, and Evelyn Waugh
132. C. S. Lewis on metaphor: A study of Lewis in the light of modern metaphor theory
133. Narrated thought and sequential argument: A comparison of two texts by C. S. Lewis
134. An annotated bibliography of the criticism of C. S. Lewis' fiction from 1981-1991
135. Subject constitution and governance in Wyndham Lewis and Friedrich Nietzsche: Towards a study of fascism and modernity
136. PERCEPTION AND FAITH: THE INTEGRATION OF GESTALT PSYCHOLOGY AND CHRISTIAN THEOLOGY IN THE THOUGHT OF C. S. LEWI
137. Propaganda Powers Social Reform: The Visual Rhetoric of Lewis Hine, Dorothea Lange, and Norman Rockwell
138. The fashion scrapbook of Miss Mabel Lewis Patterson (1872-1962)
139. The Topic of Conversion and the Issue of the 'Catholic Novel': Chesterton, Lewis, Waugh, and Godden
140. C.S. Lewis and the premodern rhetorical tradition: 'The Abolition of Man' as rhetoric and philosophy of educatio
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