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Keyword [blake]
Result: 41 - 60 | Page: 3 of 4
41. As A Creative Turning Point, Yu Lisheng
42. Once only imagined: Proto-Marxist materialism in the early illuminated manuscripts of WIlliam Blake
43. On creativity and psychological boundaries in the life and work of William Blake
44. The spirit of sound: Prosodic method in the poetry of William Blake, W. B. Yeats, and T. S. Eliot
45. Kierkegaard, Creation Anxiety, and William Blake's early Illuminated Books
46. An Oral History & Literary Review of Edward Blake, Jr.: Exploring the Evidence of a Principled Practic
47. Teaching William Blake's 'The Songs of Innocence and of Experience' to university ESL students with reader-response and Freirian pedagog
48. William Blake's artificial mythology and quotations from world mythos
49. William Blake's 'Laocoon': The genealogy of a form
50. Androgynous imagination in Romantic and Modernist literature: From William Blake and Elizabeth Barrett Browning to D. H. Lawrence and H.D.
51. The Veils of VALA: A critical survey of full editions of William Blake's 'Four Zoas' manuscript
52. Anatomy, vitality, and the Romantic Body: Blake, Coleridge, and the Hunter Circle, 1750-1840
53. Redeeming women in blake's milton
54. Pre-poetic precursors: Blake, Patchen, Nichol, and the materials and ethics of verbal-visual poetry (William Blake, Kenneth Patchen, B. P. Nichol)
55. Blake and allegory (William Blake, Johann Joachim Winckelmann, E. A. Swedenborg, John Bunyan, Edmund Spenser)
56. In search of justice: Blake, Coleridge and the romantic conflict between legal and literary discourse (Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Blake)
57. William Blake and Systems Theory The Attempted Unification of History and Psychology
58. 'Words of eternity in human forms': William Blake's transformation of styles, forms, and genres of the Hebrew Bible in 'Jerusalem'
59. Ecological communication and theories of the 'outside' in Romantic poetry (William Wordsworth, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, William Blake, Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
60. Bestiality, animality, and humanity: A study of the animal poems by D. H. Lawrence and Ted Hughes in their historical and cultural contexts (William Blake, England)
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