Keyword [Lowell] Result: 1 - 20 | Page: 1 of 2 |
| 1. | On Robert Lowell's Confessional Poetic Style Through Life Studies |
| 2. | On The Spiritual Wasteland In Robert Lowell's Elegies |
| 3. | On Postmodern Humanism Through Robert Lowell And His Poems |
| 4. | "We Were Sisters Of A Strange, Isolated Little Family"-On "Sisterhood" In Amy Lowell's Poetry |
| 5. | On The Set Of Translating Chinese Poems Into English Of The Songhua Notes |
| 6. | The Study On Important Tibet-related Activities Of Lowell Thomas |
| 7. | The Oriental Elements In Amy Lowell’s Poetry |
| 8. | Chinese Culture And The Formation Of Amy Lowell’s Modernist Poetry |
| 9. | The Musical Style And Research On Playing Technique Of Gargoyles By Lowell Liebermann |
| 10. | Religion and the American industrial city: Protestant culture and social transformation in Lowell, Massachusetts, 1824--1890 |
| 11. | Collecting agency: Reversing the camera's gaze in early twentieth-century Lowell, Massachusetts |
| 12. | Belief in the integrity of the Lowell working women: An examination of Harriet Farley's writings |
| 13. | Motive and form in Lowell Liebermann's four sonatas for violoncello and piano |
| 14. | Crossing history: New England landscape in the poetry of Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost, Wallace Stevens, and Robert Lowell |
| 15. | 'The occasion of these ruses': The mid-twentieth-century poetic speaker in the works of Robert Lowell, Frank O'Hara, and George Oppen |
| 16. | Accountability and forgiveness: Ezra Pound and Robert Lowell |
| 17. | Suffering and liberation: The personal poetics of Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg |
| 18. | Before redress: Language and reality in modernist poetry |
| 19. | Status, ideology, and identity: Class ambiguity in the humor of the Lowell 'Factory Girls,' Anne Royall, and Fanny Fern (Massachusetts) |
| 20. | The poetics of displacement: Ethnography, translation, and intertextual travel in twentieth-century American literature (Ezra Pound, Amy Lowell, John Yau, Maxine Hong Kingston, Pearl S. Buck) |
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