Keyword [beyond "melancholy"] Result: 101 - 120 | Page: 6 of 7 |
| 101. | Engendering melancholy: Romantic gender performance and the pre-history of abnormality |
| 102. | The short novel and the representation of subjectivity: 'Manhunt' by Alejo Carpentier and 'Memory of My Melancholy Whores' by Gabriel Garcia Marquez |
| 103. | Melancholy and the modern consciousness of Francesco Petrarca: A close reading of melancholy, acedia, and love-sickness in the 'Secretum', 'De Remediis Utriusque Fortunae' and 'Canzoniere' |
| 104. | Melancholy and identity in early modern England: Lady Mary Wroth and the literary tradition |
| 105. | Melancholy Figures: From Bosch to Titian |
| 106. | Melancholy and the care of the soul: Religion, moral philosophy and madness in England, 1580--1750 |
| 107. | Misery Loves Company: Melancholy Aesthetics and Nineteenth-Century British Fiction |
| 108. | Narcissistic moments in German ar |
| 109. | No Laughing Matter: Shakespearean Melancholy and the Transformation of Comedy |
| 110. | The politics of affect: Anger, melancholy, and transnational feminism in Virginia Woolf and Eileen Chang |
| 111. | Very now: Temporal aspects of melancholy in early modern English literature |
| 112. | 'The melancholy effect of popular excitement': Discourse about slavery and the social construction of the slave rebel and conspirator in newspapers |
| 113. | Racial trauma, melancholy and the desire for masculine supremacy in the works of Edgar Mittelholzer |
| 114. | Tikkun: W.G. Sebald's Melancholy Messianism |
| 115. | Tennyson's bipolar speakers: From melancholy in 'Mariana' to madness in 'Maud' (Alfred, Lord Tennyson) |
| 116. | The geography of melancholy: Depression and healing in the works of British women writers, 1785--1845 |
| 117. | Melancholy, religious despair, and social disintegration in the plays of John Webster |
| 118. | 'Mad in craft': Action and melancholy in William Shakespeare's Hamlet |
| 119. | 'Tis all one': 'The Anatomy of Melancholy' as belated copious discourse |
| 120. | Insanity, hysteria and melancholy in seventeenth-century English continuo song |
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