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The theme of alienation in modern Chinese and Anglo-American fiction /Cheng, Po-suen, January 1985 (has links)
Thesis--M. Phil., University of Hong Kong, 1985. / Photocopy of typeccript.
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Victorian professionals, intersubjectivity, and the fin-de-siecle gothic text /Stasiak, Lauren Anne, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 189-194).
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A question of identity: a study of three Indian novels in English of the nineteen eightiesMathai, Kavita. January 1996 (has links)
published_or_final_version / English / Master / Master of Philosophy
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Literary citation in the works of Joseph ConradDiggs, Della A., 1902- January 1938 (has links)
No description available.
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Representation of war in the English novel, 1914-1940White, Joan, 1918- January 1940 (has links)
No description available.
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A crisis of metanarratives : realism and innovation in the contemporary English novelGasiorek, Andrew B. P. (Andrew Boguslaw Peter) January 1990 (has links)
Critics of the English novel, arguing that it is underpinned by liberalism, frequently claim that the crisis of realism disclosed in the work of many contemporary writers derives from a concomitant crisis of liberalism. Liberalism's dissolution is thus seen to prefigure the death of the novel. This dissertation contends that realism cannot be equated with liberalism and that the contemporary crisis of representation signals a broader crisis of metanarratives. / Focussing on selected novels of five post-war English novelists--B. S. Johnson, Doris Lessing, John Berger, Iris Murdoch, and Angus Wilson--I argue that their different responses to the crisis of representation show that it is not a crisis of liberalism alone. Johnson rejects realism for epistemological reasons; Lessing and Berger question it on political grounds; Murdoch and Wilson combine its strengths with a self-reflexive awareness of its weaknesses. I suggest that Murdoch's and Wilson's novels, which argue that fiction does not reflect reality but endows it with meaning and which are at once representational and metafictional, offer the most fruitful ways of acknowledging the crisis of representation while refusing to be paralyzed by it.
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The short stories of Ahmed Essop.Naicker, Vijaykumari. January 2002 (has links)
Abstract not available. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2002.
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Fractions of a man : doubles in Victorian fictionCameron, Elspeth, 1943- January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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A reassessment of the junior novel based on analysis of thirty selected novels of the early 1970'sRabe, Joseph Clemens January 1974 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this dissertation.
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Fending off feminization : erecting gender/ed boundaries and preserving masculinity in 1930s British fictionMcFaden, Gwen M. January 2002 (has links)
Adverse economic and social conditions during the 1930s prompted fears that Britain and its populace were becoming feminized. Mass unemployment, the collapse of the older forms of masculinist industry, and the sudden expansion of London's consumer culture were three major events that contributed to perceptions of declining masculinity and rampant feminization. Unemployment, it was feared, transformed muscular, self-reliant laborers into emasculate, dependent idlers. The demise of industry (coal mining, ship building, and iron/steel working) turned symbolic garrisons of imperial strength and power into derelict wastelands. London's consumerism in the form of cheap goods and escapist entertainment was thought to pacify and enfeeble the (male) inhabitants. These three pivotal events fueled apprehensions about the breakdown in traditional, patriarchal structures and heightened sensitivities to and furthered the use of masculine/feminine dichotomies within public discourse.The aim of my dissertation is to explore the ways in which complex networks of gender anxieties resonate in 1930s British fiction through the establishment and erosion of rhetorical gender/ed boundaries. Although fears regarding the political landscape, social unrest, and war were instrumental in shaping the literary responses of the decade, those fears were also informed by and articulated through a gender-conscious rhetoric. Emasculation imagery worked in concert with the complementary feminization imagery to capture the popular imagination. Apprehensions about women's potential to disrupt traditional boundaries (sexualized women, i.e. women taking men's jobs) merged with generalized fears of the feminine (constructed Woman, i.e. an undefined fear femaleness), and both were inscribed with the power to disrupt, threaten, and subsume. These "discourses of gender and gendered discourses," to adopt Lyn Pykett's phrase, played an integral part in shaping how the 1930s populace interpreted their rapidly changing world. By promoting gender to the center of my interpretive paradigm, I aim to identify how representations of the private realm interact with and contribute to the public/political narrative thrusts. / Department of English
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