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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