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Keyword [The Character of the "Madness"]
Result: 181 - 200 | Page: 10 of 10
181. Noetic navigation through madness and mysticism: A qualitative exploration of spiritual crises and inner guidance in the Netherlands
182. Romantic madness: A cultural study, 1780--1850 (John Clare, Mary Wollstonecraft, William Belcher, Urbane Metcalf, John Perceval, James Tilly Matthews)
183. Tennyson's bipolar speakers: From melancholy in 'Mariana' to madness in 'Maud' (Alfred, Lord Tennyson)
184. Bodies of knowledge: Madness and power in Africana women's texts
185. Critical moments: Paul Celan and figurations of madness
186. Best of bedlam: Madness on the English Renaissance stage
187. Women, marriage, and madness in Jean Rhys's 'Wide Sargasso Sea', Virginia Woolf's 'Mrs. Dalloway', and Doris Lessing's 'The Golden Notebook', as seen through Charlotte Gilman Perkin's 'The Yellow Wallpaper' (Dominica, Zimbabwe)
188. The peculiar sanity of war: Representations of madness in World War I literature
189. 'Some precious instance': Ophelia, madness and Renaissance woman
190. Ecstasy and the beyond: The role of madness in Russian Symbolist art and theory
191. A sojourn through madness in 'The Embroidered Shoes' of Can Xue
192. Madness, myth, and misogyny: A study of Shakespeare's 'Hamlet', 'King Lear', and 'Macbeth'
193. Performing madness: The representation of insanity in nineteenth and twentieth century theatre, from Jean-Martin Charcot to Marguerite Duras
194. The discourse of madness as structure and theme in the work of Timothy Findley
195. Witches, madness, and the hermeneutics of confession Sexual difference and Foucault's 'history of truth
196. The psychotext: Literary madness in late-sixties American fiction
197. Out of the margins: The movement of madness in the literature of the twentieth century
198. Madness and fiction in Conrad, Woolf, and Lessing (Joseph Conrad, Virginia Woolf, Doris Lessing, Zimbabwe)
199. U got2 dis B4 U re/from disease to revival: Reading the themes of madness in PanAfrican women's literature (Toni Cade Bambara, Bessie Head, South Africa, Myriam Warner-Vieyra, Guadeloupe)
200. The poetics of hysterics: Feminine madness in Victorian English and modern Chinese women's literature
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