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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