Search Constraints
Search Results
Select an image to start the slideshow
The Ballad of Oscar Wilde
1 of 20
“Both Text and Gloss”: Hermeneutic Translatory Structures in Molloy and Waiting for Godot
2 of 20
“I’m the plot, babe, and don’t ever forget it”: Margaret Atwood, Lorrie Moore, and Jennifer Egan’s Experimental Short Story Collections
3 of 20
Irreverent Reading: Nations, Books and Communities in the Postcolonial Novel (1897-1997)
4 of 20
Outside the Habitable Zone: The Poetry and Politics of Life in Wordsworth’s Salisbury Plain Poems
5 of 20
Postal Poetics in Contemporary Northern Irish Poetry
6 of 20
Revolutionary Claims: Transatlantic Agency in the Fictions of
Godwin, Brown, and Irving
7 of 20
Wasting Romanticism: Melancholic Hunger and Maternal Remains in
Mary Shelley, Thomas De Quincey, and Emily Brontë
8 of 20
Killing Time on the Early Modern Stage: Tempo, Judgment, and the
Art of Defense
9 of 20
Dead Center: The Invention of Character in the Language of
Modernism
10 of 20
Fictions of Life and Death in Wilde, Gide, Strachey, and Woolf
11 of 20
The Senselessness of an Ending in Wordsworth, P. B. Shelley, and
Keats
12 of 20
The Tears of Dionysus: the Birth of Catastrophic Theater in British
Drama
13 of 20
Legacies of Loss: Traumatic Aftermaths in Twentieth-Century
Literature
14 of 20
After Skepticism: Hume and the Political Aesthetics of Romanticism
15 of 20
A Hebraic Modernity: Poetry, Prayer, and Translation in the Long
Eighteenth Century
16 of 20
The Gift of Poetry in Romantic and Post-Romantic Literature
17 of 20
Nomad Memory: Inscribing Orality in Literatures of the Americas and
South Asia
18 of 20
Affects of War: Sovereignty and Violence in Wordsworth, Coleridge, Hazlitt, And De Quincey
19 of 20
The Fiction of Generosity: Disinterest and the Eighteenth Century
20 of 20