Keyword ["Three bodies"] Result: 181 - 200 | Page: 10 of 10 |
181. | Subversive bodies in nineteenth-century narratives of Paris and Londo |
182. | Resisting bodies: Promise and change in the feminist representation of girls in the performative arena |
183. | Editorial bodies in ancient Roman rhetorical culture |
184. | New markets, new bodies: An ethnography of Brazil's beauty industry |
185. | Bodies of evidence: Portraits of post-feminine performance (Aileen Carol Wuornos, Manabu Yamanaka, Brandon Teena, Billy Tipton) |
186. | Denying imperial bodies: Tang Taizong and the poetics of sovereignty (China) |
187. | Re-membering the body: Narrative and representation in Asian American literature (David Henry Hwang, Lois Ann Yamanka, Jessica Hagedorn) |
188. | Reproducing race: Early modern bodies and the construction of national difference (Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare) |
189. | Bodies in the 'house of fiction': The architecture of domestic and narrative spaces by Jane Austen, Elizabeth Gaskell and George Eliot |
190. | Deviant bodies and the reordering of desire: Heterosexuality and nation-building in early modern England |
191. | Entangling bodies and borders: Racial profiling and the United States Border Patrol, 1924--1955 (Mexico) |
192. | Foreign bodies of knowledge: Crossing cultural borders through the actor's work |
193. | Refrained flesh: Building bodies with Deleuze and Guattari |
194. | Bodies in Action: Senga Nengudi's 'R.S.V.P. Respondez S'il Vous Plait' (1975/2003 |
195. | Shakespeare's knowledgeable body: Ways of knowing in the Shakespearean body politic |
196. | No longer strangers or aliens: Exiled bodies, Bonhoeffer's theology of Holy Communion, and celebrating Eucharist among exile |
197. | Making female sexuality in Republican China: Women's bodies in the discourses of hygiene, education, and literature |
198. | Bodies of knowledge: Madness and power in Africana women's texts |
199. | Bodies of evidence: Women, society, and detective fiction in contemporary Japan |
200. | Sensational modernism: Disfigured bodies and aesthetic astonishment in modern American literature and photography |
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