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Literature, British & Irish |
Author: Edited by Susan Gushee O'MalleyPub Date: 2004 Six complete, annotated pamphlets on the role of women in 15th Century society. They give insight into debates within English culture on gossips, treatises against wife-beating, speriority of women, and cross-dressing. learn more... |
Author: Edited by Erica FudgePub Date: February 2004 Where are all the animals in history? Renaissance Beasts begins to answer that question by exploring numerous ways in which animals played a key role in Renaissance culture: werewolves, meat, performers, experimental tools. learn more... |
Author: Alessa JohnsPub Date: August 2003 Looks at Utopian novels written by women, how they incorporate emerging liberal ideas, their reservations about these ideas, and how Utopian societies can replicate. learn more... |
Author: Mary BlockleyPub Date: March 2002 This is the first major linguistic re-interpretation of Old English, showing where the first sentences in English begin and end, and why it matters. learn more... |
Author: Joseph ValentePub Date: November 2002 learn more... |
Author: Juan Luis VivesPub Date: May 2002 The first and only transcription of the complete English translation of this famous book, the most influential book in Tudor England concerning women and their proper behavior. learn more... |
Author: Erica FudgePub Date: 2002 learn more... |
Author: James H. MoreyPub Date: 2000 learn more... |
Author: J. Hillis MillerPub Date: 2000 In this acclaimed study, J. Hillis Miller focuses on five Victorian authors--Matthew Arnold, Charlotte Brontë, Robert Browning, Thomas DeQuincey, and Gerard Manley Hopkins--to present their various responses to crises of faith in the face of Darwinism, the rise of science, urbanization and other factors that seemed to distance them from God. learn more... |
Author: Tamar KatzPub Date: November 2000 Impressionist Subjects looks at the way modernist writers wrote about how the mind works, and connects those ideas to the way that women moved into public life in the early 20th century. learn more... |
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