Self in literature
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Self in literature
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Self in literature
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Incoming Resources
- The shattering of the self, violence, subjectivity, and early modern texts, Cynthia Marshall
- The fiction of relationship, Arnold Weinstein ; illustrations by Dan Reed
- Self and community in the fiction of Elizabeth Spencer, Terry Roberts
- The work of self-representation, lyric poetry in colonial New England, Ivy Schweitzer
- A choice of inheritance, self and community from Edmund Burke to Robert Frost, David Bromwich
- The novels of Toni Morrison, the search for self and place within the community, Patrick Bryce Bjork
- This stubborn self, Texas autobiographies, by Bert Almon
- Storyteller, the authorized biography of Roald Dahl, Donald Sturrock
- The senses of humor, self and laughter in modern America, Daniel Wickberg
- Mark Twain on the loose, a comic writer and the American self, Bruce Michelson
- Heart in conflict, Faulkner's struggles with vocation, Michael Grimwood
- Charles Dickens and the romantic self, Lawrence Frank
- After confession, poetry as autobiography, [edited by Kate Sontag & David Graham]
- Montaigne's self-portrait and its influence in France, 1580-1630, by Ian J. Winter
- The disenchanted self, representing the subject in the Canterbury tales, H. Marshall Leicester, Jr
- James Agee and the legend of himself, a critical study, Alan Spiegel
- The given and the made, strategies of poetic redefinition, Helen Vendler
- The poetics of disappointment, Wordsworth to Ashbery, Laura Quinney
- Henry James and the father question, Andrew Taylor
- Charlotte Brontë and Victorian psychology, Sally Shuttleworth
- A self made of words, crafting a distinctive persona in nonfiction writing, Carl H. Klaus
- Unstuck in time, a journey through Kurt Vonnegut's life and novels, Gregory D. Sumner
- The ludic self in seventeenth-century English literature, Anna K. Nardo
- Joyce's messianism, Dante, negative existence, and the messianic self, Gian Balsamo
- Self-discovery and authority in Afro-American narrative, Valerie Smith
- Spenser's life and the subject of biography, edited by Judith H. Anderson, Donald Cheney, David A. Richardson
- Shakespeare's Hamlet and the controversies of self, John Lee
- Pursuing privacy in Cold War America, Deborah Nelson
- Autobiography, the self made text, James Goodwin
- Having it both ways, self-subversion in western popular classics, Forrest G. Robinson
- Virginia Woolf, an inner life, Julia Briggs
- Voices of the fugitives, runaway slave stories and their fictions of self-creation, Sterling Lecater Bland, Jr
- World, self, poem, essays on contemporary poetry from the "Jubliation of poets", edited by Leonard M. Trawick
- Creating the self in the contemporary American theatre, Robert J. Andreach
- Telling border life stories, four Mexican American women writers, Donna M. Kabalen de Bichara
- Jack Kerouac's Duluoz legend, the mythic form of an autobiographical fiction, James T. Jones
- The monstered self, narratives of death and performance in Latin American fiction, Eduardo Gonzalez
- John Milton, the self and the world, John T. Shawcross
- Narcissus from rubble, competing models of character in contemporary British and American fiction, Julius Rowan Raper
- Monumental anxieties, homoerotic desire and feminine influence in 19th century U.S. literature, Scott S. Derrick
- The senses of humor, self and laughter in modern America, Daniel Wickberg
- Dramas of solitude, narratives of retreat in American nature writing, Randall Roorda
- Comic women, tragic men, a study of gender and genre in Shakespeare, Linda Bamber
- Recovering your story, Proust, Joyce, Woolf, Faulkner, Morrison /, Arnold Weinstein
- Breaking new ground, the transgressive poetics of Claudio Rodríguez, W. Michael Mudrovic
- The poetics of disappointment, Wordsworth to Ashbery, Laura Quinney
- "The stranger within thee", concepts of the self in late-eighteenth-century literature, Stephen D. Cox
- The imaginary puritan, literature, intellectual labor, and the origins of personal life, Nancy Armstrong, Leonard Tennenhouse
- This stubborn self, Texas autobiographies, by Bert Almon
- The lives of literature, reading, teaching, knowing, Arnold Weinstein
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1