Browsing School of English and Drama by Issue Date
Now showing items 21-40 of 488
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Brick Lane: A Materialist Reading of the Novel and its Reception
(Sage, 2010-10)Monica Ali’s 2003 novel Brick Lane was feted by the literary establishment but prompted protests on Brick Lane itself. In a now familiar pattern, such protests were generally regarded as reflecting a conflict between ... -
Hazlitt and Hume: Personal Identity as Imaginative Narration
(Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier, 2011) -
Beyond Autonomy: Political Dimensions of Modernist Novels
(Cambridge University Press, 2011) -
Recreation and William Alexander’s Doomes-day (1637)
(2011-04-01) -
The Semaines' Dissemination in England and Scotland until 1641
(Wiley: 24 months, 2011-08-05)This article tracks the reputation of Guillaume de Saluste Du Bartas's Semaines (1578, 1584 et seq.) among readers in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England and Scotland. The Semaines were initially mentioned in print ... -
The Criminalization of Dissent: Protest Violence, Activist Performance, and the Curious Case of the VolxTheaterKarawane in Genoa
(MIT Press - Journals, 2011-12) -
'The Darling of the Temple-Coffee-House Club’: Science, Sociability and Satire in Early Eighteenth-Century London
(Blackwell Publishing, 2012)This article explores the relationship between metropolitan sociability and the production of natural knowledge in early eighteenth-century London. It considers three discursive sites where the intellectual and sociable ... -
'An author in form': Women writers, print publication, and Elizabeth Montagu's Dialogues of the Dead
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012)Eighteenth-century women writers repeatedly expressed resistance to the public exposure of print publication. The first publication of the bluestocking intellectual Elizabeth Montagu, three satirical dialogues included in ... -
Du Bartas’ Visit to England and Scotland in 1587
(Oxford University Press, 2012-10-19) -
Word versus honor: The case of Françoise de Rohan vs. Jacques de Savoie
(2012-12-24)This paper examines one of the most notorious scandals of sixteenth-century France. In 1557, Françoise de Rohan, a lady-in-waiting to Catherine de Medici, launched a legal battle to get the duke of Nemours, Jacques de ... -
Creative Gardens
(2013)