- UHRA Home
- Browsing by Author
Browsing by Author "English Literature"
Now showing items 41-60 of 180
-
Entries on children's literature, modernist poetry and contemporary fiction
Tripp, Anna (Cassell, 2007) -
Epistolary Exchange : the Familiar Letter and the Female Botanist, 1760-1820
George, Sam (2011-10)An investigation into women’s involvement with botany in the eighteenth century invariably leads to the culture of letters. The Duchess of Portland (1715-1785) compiled notebooks on natural history, but it is her letters ... -
The Eye of a Needle : Commemorating the ‘Godly Merchant’ in the Early Modern Funeral Sermon
Pritchard, Penny (2017-11-01) -
The Faith of William Shakespeare
Holderness, Graham (Lion Hudson, 2016-11-18)A monograph on Shakespeare's religious faith as evidenced through his life and works. -
'Family Territory' to the 'Circumference of the Earth' : Local and Planetary Memories of Climate Change in Barbara Kingsolver's Flight Behaviour
Lloyd, Christopher; Rapson, Jessica (2017-07-29)This article argues that Barbara Kinsolver’s novel Flight Behaviour (2012) responds to the transformations of climate change by charting interactions between local and planetary environments, prompting readers to contextualise ... -
Fiction: United States
Hughes, Rowland (Taylor & Francis Group, 2004) -
The First World War Stage : At the Edge of the Canon
Maunder, Andrew (2014-04) -
Flooding Mississippi : Memory, Race and Landscape in Twenty-First-Century Fiction
Lloyd, Christopher (Louisiana State University Press, 2019-08) -
Floods, erosion, tourists and ghosts: M. R. James' and E. F. Benson's defence of the East Anglian coast in 'Oh, Whistle, and I'll Come to You My Lad', ‘A Warning to the Curious’ and E. F. Benson’s ‘A Tale of an Empty House’.
Sausman, Justin (University of Hertfordshire, 2020-12-02)This article situates Edwardian and inter-war ghost stories by M. R. James and E. F. Benson as oblique responses to early twentieth century debates about rural environments, the impact of tourism and coastal erosion. It ... -
Foreword
George, Samantha (McFarland, 2013-12) -
From Summit to Tragedy : Sulayman Al-Bassam's Richard III and Political Theatre
Holderness, G. (2007) -
“Funny men and charming girls” : Revue and the theatrical landscape of 1914-1918.
Maunder, Andrew (Taylor & Francis Group, 2017) -
Gender
Tripp, Anna; School of Humanities; English Literature and Creative Writing; English Literature (Palgrave Macmillan Ltd., 2000) -
Gender and Power in Shrew-Taming Narratives, 1500-1700
Wootton, D.; Holderness, G.; School of Humanities; English Literature and Creative Writing; Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities Research Institute; English Literature (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010)Explores the various dramatic, poetic and narrative versions of the popular 'taming of the shrew' story, from the Middle Ages to the Restoration, in the light of new historical work on the place of early modern women in society. -
Gender and Sexuality in Dracula
Holderness, G. (2015-10-24) -
Hamlet : (study texts)
Shakespeare, William; Holderness, G.; Loughrey, B. (Longman, 1990)The series of Longman Study Texts are written in a way that explores a wide range of classical as well as modern writers, covering all literary genres. They are catered to both exam and coursework needs at GCSE level, and ... -
Hamnet Shakespeare
Holderness, G. (Cambridge University Press, 2015-10-31) -
'The Handmaidens of Death' : [First World War play about the lives of female munitions workers]
Tremaine, Herbert (2012-06-29)First World War play about the lives of female munitions workers -
Harlequin Encore : 60 Years of the Britannia Pantomime
Norwood, Janice (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010)