Keyword [Sylvia] Result: 61 - 80 | Page: 4 of 5 |
61. | An Ode To Life:A Feminist Analysis Of Sylvia Plath's Poems |
62. | On The Female World Writing In "The Bell Jar" |
63. | Performing to reclaim: War trauma and female non-combatant recovery in Sylvia Townsend Warner, Virginia Woolf, and H.D |
64. | Deaths and entrances: The influence of spectrality and death in Sylvia Plath and Dylan Thomas |
65. | Getting out of Wonderland: Elizabeth Bishop, Sylvia Plath, Adrienne Rich, and Anne Sexton |
66. | Sylvia Plath's 'The Bell Jar' as disability narrative |
67. | Modernism and the marketplace: Literary cultures and consumer capitalism, 1915--1939 (Jean Rhys, Dominica, Virginia Woolf, Gertrude Stein, Sylvia Beach, Nella Larsen) |
68. | The process of directing Edward Albee's 'The Goat or, Who is Sylvia?' |
69. | The Soul of Shakespeare and Company: Sylvia Beach's Journey into Leadership |
70. | Marginal Representation in Culture: Feminist Epistemology and The Art of Sylvia Sleigh and Alice Neel |
71. | Creativity and control: A comparative study of Sylvia Plath and Manuel Puig |
72. | In a new vein: Theorizing addiction and identity in Thomas De Quincey, Sylvia Plath, and Tupac Shakur |
73. | The inhuman imagination in twentieth-century poetry: From Robinson Jeffers and D. H. Lawrence to Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath |
74. | Sylvia Plath: The cauldron of mourning |
75. | Shock treatments: Witnessing in postwar performance (Sylvia Plath, Allen Ginsberg, James Baldwin) |
76. | The end of the mind: The edge of the intelligible in Hardy, Stevens, Larkin, Plath, and Gluck (Thomas Hardy, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Sylvia Plath, Louise Glueck) |
77. | Ghost-writing into eternity: Representations of the woman author as spirit/conjurer (Edith Wharton, Shirley Jackson, Alison Lurie, Joyce Carol Oates, Sylvia Plath) |
78. | Releasing philosophy, thinking art: A bodily hermeneutic of four poems by Sylvia Plath |
79. | Multiplicity and paradox in the life and work of Sylvia Plath |
80. | Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton: Passion, perfection, and death through poetic confession |
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