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Keyword [Nineteenth-century british]
Result: 41 - 60 | Page: 3 of 4
41.
Oceans apart: Women readers in the nineteenth-century British and American novel
42.
Fashioning the female artistic self: Aesthetic Dress in nineteenth-century British visual culture
43.
The development of the rebellion novel genre in nineteenth century British literature
44.
'The schoolmaster is abroad': The diffusion of educational innovations in the nineteenth century British Empire
45.
And Everything Nice: Girls, Aggression, and the Nineteenth-Century British Novel
46.
Inhabiting the middle race: How five Eurasian men walked the color line in British India, 1778--1852
47.
Reading the Riot Act: Unruly crowds, unlawful assemblies, and nineteenth-century British fiction
48.
Spinning their wheels: Spinsters and narrative in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century British women's fiction
49.
State fantasy: The late nineteenth-century British novel and the cultural formation of state personhood (Thomas Hardy, George Gissing, Sarah Grand)
50.
Ways of thinking about law in four nineteenth -century British novels: 'Orley Farm', 'Paul Clifford', 'The Woman in White', 'Felix Holt
51.
The archetype of the Great Goddess as palimpsestic protest in selected fiction and poetry of nineteenth-century British and American women writers
52.
'The awful facts': Figurations of the worker in nineteenth-century British literature (Elizabeth Gaskell, James Kay)
53.
Working class autobiography and middle class writers: Fictive representations of the working classes in nineteenth century British literature
54.
Reconfiguring the Other in late nineteenth-century British utopian literature
55.
Recognition reinterpreted: Aristotelian 'Anagnorisis' and nineteenth century British fiction
56.
'The continually increasing multitude': Class anxiety and the masses in nineteenth century British literature
57.
Breaking form's promise: Writing against the 'Bildungsroman' in nineteenth century British fiction
58.
WOMEN OF AUTHORITY: FEMINIST RE-VISION IN THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY BRITISH NOVEL
59.
A STUDY OF THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY BRITISH MATHEMATICIANS TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF ABSTRACT ALGEBRA AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON LATER ALGEBRAISTS AND MODERN SECONDARY CURRICULA
60.
Undead Empire: How Folklore Animates the Human Corpse in Nineteenth-Century British Literature
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