Keyword [early modern] Result: 181 - 200 | Page: 10 of 10 |
181. | Vessels of vengeance: Divine wrath and human instruments in early modern revenge tragedy |
182. | Reformation iconoclasm as negotiation: Protestant rhetoric, action, and policy regarding religious images in early modern Europe |
183. | A globe of countries: Carto-geographic consciousness and the production of early modern English literature, 1516-1616 |
184. | The politics of eros: Writing under the auspices of Ovid's Cupid in early modern English literature |
185. | 'Nature hath given you a sheath only': Swordplay and gender in Beaumont and Fletcher's 'Love's Cure, or the Martial Maid' |
186. | Printing pleasing profit: The crafting of capital selves and sales in early modern, English drama |
187. | To heal and harm: Seventeenth-century literature, medicine and the body |
188. | 'Raptures of futurity': Monumentality and the pursuit of posterity in early modern drama |
189. | (Re)using women: The image debate in early modern allegory |
190. | Words in the world: The place of literature in Early Modern England |
191. | Disappearing acts: Performing the petrarchan mistress in early modern England |
192. | Adopted papal kin as art patrons in early modern Rome (1592--1676) |
193. | The tales of Yoshitsune: A study of genre, narrative paradigms, and cultural memory in medieval and early modern Japan |
194. | Visual and Material Culture at Hokyoji Imperial Convent: The Significance of 'Women's Art' in Early Modern Japan |
195. | The unknowing self: Knowledge, ignorance, and early modern subjects |
196. | Members of His body: Christ's Passion and community in early modern English poetry, 1595--1646 |
197. | 'Like life in excrements': Natural philosophy, hair, and the limits of the body's vitality in early modern English thought |
198. | The rhetoric of bonds, alliances, and identities: Interrogating social networks in early modern English drama |
199. | The Justification of the Law of the Sea in Early Modern Europe |
200. | Governing households: Discourses of governmentality and the rise of the family in early modern German literature |
|