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Charles Kingsley's Westward ho! as the protestant foundation myth
(2013)
The historical novel was one of the most widely read genres in popular Victorian literature;
however, Victorian writers who set their novels in the past did so not only because of the
adventure potential and the colourful ...
Naturalistic addacement: The grotesque in Stephen Crane's The Monster
(2013)
Disfigured, exaggerated, and animal-like characters can be considered a staple in American
literary naturalism. From Frank Norris’s slow-witted, bullish McTeague to the tortured victim
of mob justice in Theodore Dreiser’s ...
The hopes of regeneration in John Dryden’s early restoration poems
(2013)
Cromwell’s death and the ineffective rule of his son Richard led to the inevitable decision
made by the English government – Charles II was to be restored to secure social stability and
royal continuity. When in January ...
New woman subversion and autobiography: Ella Hepworth Dixon
(2013)
New women writers of the fin-de-siècle broke loose from conventional Victorian narrative
forms, structures and topics in many ways, thus opening a road to modernism. However, it
was no easy task for them to deal with ...
The 1840s Irish State Trials and their depiction in the two english ilustrated periodicals: Punch, or the London Charivari and The Illustrated London News
(2013)
One of the events that received extensive and widespread coverage in the English press
in the first half of the nineteenth century was the arrest and the subsequent trial of the
Irish liberator and emancipist Daniel ...
Measure for measure or: on the influence of Philip Larkin on William Shakespeare
(2013)
As Slavoj Žižek claims, Shakespeare’s Richard II clearly shows that the Bard was well familiar
with the work of the French philosopher, Jacques Lacan. In my paper I will try to demonstrate
that he was also well acquainted ...
Ale and beer as staple drinks in medieval and early modern England
(2013)
Ale has been known in Britain for ages. The Celts produced a porridge-like concoction with
various herbs added. The Anglo-Saxons brewed a variety of ales and many of the English
terms used in brewing are of Anglo-Saxon ...
The cloud of unknowing: the orgin of its imagery in the judeo-christian spiritual tradition
(2013)
The present work shows the origins of the eponymous metaphor of a cloud in a book called
The Cloud of Unknowing, a masterpiece written by an anonymous 14th-century English
mystic. The book is of great religious and ...
From 9/11 to 7/7 and beyond: film and fear
(2013)
From 9/11 to 7/7 and Beyond outlines the filmic representations of the terrorist attacks in
New York, Madrid and London. The author divides the films into five possible categories
(TV documentaries, conspiracy documentaries, ...
Churchill's visit to Cyprus in 1907: enosis and constitutional issues
(2013)
Churchill, when still a young politician, in October 1907 visited Cyprus in his capacity of under-
-secretary of state for the colonies. The island de jure belonged still to the Ottoman Empire,
but since 1878 it had been ...










