Items where Subject is "PR English literature"

Library of Congress subjects (102130) P Language and Literature (4277) PR English literature (24)
Number of items at this level: 24.
2022
  • Shipp, Leo (2022). The poets laureate of the long eighteenth century, 1668–1813: courting the public. University of London Press. https://doi.org/10.14296/sner2422 picture_as_pdf
  • 2020
  • Doyle, K.A. (2 April 2020) Book review: tyrant: Shakespeare on politics by Stephen Greenblatt. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • 2018
  • Lacey, Nicola (2018). Women, crime and character in twentieth century law and literature: in search of the modern Moll Flanders. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers 20/2017). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3083981
  • 2017
  • Soboleva, Olga (2017). The east wind of Russiannness. In Soboleva, Olga, Wrenn, Angus (Eds.), From Orientalism to Cultural Capital: The Myth of Russia in British Literature of the 1920s (pp. 17 - 64). Verlag Peter Lang. https://doi.org/10.3726/b11211
  • Soboleva, Olga, Wrenn, Angus (2017). Introduction. In From Orientalism to Cultural Capital: The Myth of Russia in British Literature of the 1920s (pp. 1 - 15). Verlag Peter Lang. https://doi.org/10.3726/b11211
  • 2016
  • Newburn, Tim (2016). Book review: Hillsborough voices: the real story told by the people themselves by Kevin Sampson (in association with the Hillsborough Justice Campaign).
  • Sobolev, Olga (2016). The reception of Alfred Tennyson in Russia. In Ormond, Leonee (Ed.), The Reception of Alfred Tennyson in Europe (pp. 233-267). Bloomsbury Academic.
  • 2014
  • Franklin, Sophie (2014). Book review: sex, crime and literature in Victorian England by Ian Ward.
  • Friedman, Sam (2014). Comedy and distinction: the cultural currency of a ‘good’ sense of humour. Routledge.
  • 2013
  • Faubert, Michelle (2013). Book review: the poet’s mind: the psychology of Victorian poetry 1830-1870.
  • Harkins, Steven (2013). Book review: Dickens and race.
  • Lacey, Nicola (2013). Could he forgive her? Gender, agency and women’s criminality in the novels of Anthony Trollope. In Nussbaum, Martha C., LaCroix, Alison L. (Eds.), Subversion and Sympathy: Gender, Law and the British Novel (pp. 176-204). Oxford University Press.
  • 2011
  • Lacey, Nicola (2011). The way we lived then: the legal profession and the 19th-century novel. Sydney Law Review, 33(4), 599-621.
  • Stock, Paul (2011). The Shelleys on display: exhibiting lives and letters. Eighteenth-Century Studies, 45(1), 177-180. https://doi.org/10.1353/ecs.2011.0038
  • 2010
  • Stock, Paul (2010). The Shelley-Byron circle and the idea of Europe. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • 2008
  • Lacey, Nicola (2008). Women, crime, and character: from Moll Flanders to Tess of the d'Urbervilles. Oxford University Press.
  • Stock, Paul (2008). The Shelleys and the Idea of Europe. European Romantic Review, 19(4), 335-349. https://doi.org/10.1080/10509580802405684
  • 2006
  • Stock, Paul (2006). Imposing on Napoleon: the Romantic appropriation of Bonaparte. Journal of European Studies, 36(3), 363-388. https://doi.org/10.1177/0047244106071069
  • 2005
  • Wrenn, Angus (2005). Angle of elevation: social class, transport and perception of the city in "The Soul of London". In Haslam, Sara (Ed.), Ford Madox Ford and the City (pp. 41-54). Rodopi.
  • 2002
  • Hemmings, Clare (2002). All my life I’ve been waiting for something: theorising femme narrative in The Well of Loneliness. In Doan, Laura, Prosser, Jay (Eds.), Palatable Poison: Critical Perspectives on the Well of Loneliness (pp. 179-196). Columbia University Press.
  • 2001
  • Bénéï, Véronique (2001). Book review: whose India?: the independence struggle in British and Indian fiction and history, by Teresa Hubel. L'homme, (157), 306-307.
  • 2000
  • Smith, Leonard A. (2000). Feeding frenzy is short of juice.
  • Smith, Leonard A. (2000). Rough survey of how ticks all add up.
  • 1987
  • Evans, Mary (1987). Jane Austen and the state. Tavistock Publications.