Browsing Comparative Literature and Culture by Title
Now showing items 35-54 of 105
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Geologic Explusions
(Monash University Musuem of Art, 2017-04-01) -
Geology
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THE GODFATHER OF “OCCIDENTALITY”: AUGUSTE COMTE AND THE IDEA OF “THE WEST”
(Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017-10-11) -
Goethe's Discourses on World Literature
(Cambridge University Press, 2023-07-15) -
The ‘Goethean’ Discourses on Weltliteratur and the Origins of Comparative Literature: The Cases of Hugo Meltzl and Hutcheson Macaulay Posnett.
(University of Toronto Press, 2018-05-01) -
Greening a Narrative Mode: Antipodean Magical Realism and Ecocriticism in Richard Flanagan’s Fiction
(Sydney University Press, 2018) -
« Half dicht, half prose gheordineert » : vers et prose de moyen français en moyen néerlandais
(Brepols, 2016-10-03)In both French-speaking and Dutch-speaking literary cultures of the late Middle Ages, competition between poets produced a collective poetic expertise. To what extent, then, can such competition be identified across the ... -
Henry James, in Short
(2008) -
‘Immaterial Labour and the Work of Modernist Literature’,
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2018-05-16)This chapter draws on the concept of ‘immaterial labour’ to explore two key questions: ‘What is the work of literature?’ and ‘How might literary writing best be theorised as “work”?’ The activity of literary writing has ... -
‘The Impossibility of Knowing’: Developing Magical Realism’s Irony in Gould’s Book of Fish
(Association for the Study of Australian Literature, 2014-10-01)Irony is an underlying factor of magical realist fiction. Richard Flanagan’s novel Gould’s Book of Fish (2001) is imbued with a particular kind of irony that results from a gap between a contemporary reader’s lament for a ... -
Indeterminate bodies
(SAGE Publications, 2017-07-31) -
Indeterminate Subjects, Irreducible Worlds: Two Economies of Indeterminacy
(SAGE Publications, 2017-07-31) -
Indeterminate Subjects, Irreducible Worlds: Two Economies of Indeterminacy
(SAGE Publications, 2017-07-31) -
Intersecting Imperialisms: The Rise and Fall of Empires in Richard Flanagan’s The Narrow Road to the Deep North
(Brill, 2019-08-12)Richard Flanagan’s The Narrow Road to the Deep North (2013), which features the Thai-Burma ‘Death Railway’ in World War Two, depicts a complex web of imperial regimes that converge and clash in the mid-twentieth century. ... -
Introduction: Methods in China-India Studies
(Cambridge University Press, 2022) -
Knowing Dickens
(2008-06) -
Listening to the <i>Alice</i> Books
(2021) -
The location of world literature
(2018-04-02)