Keyword [Anglo] Result: 181 - 200 | Page: 10 of 10 |
181. | 'The invisible lines between us': Border-making in Anglo-America, 1750--1800 |
182. | An oral and cognitive approach to Anglo-Saxon poetry: Association, rhizomes, emotions and performance |
183. | The Anglo-Iraqi relationship between 1945 and 194 |
184. | Between women: Alliances and divisions in American Indian, Mexican American, and Anglo American literatures of protest to colonialism |
185. | Written on water: The poetics of Anglo-American exchange (Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, W. H. Auden, Charles Tomlinson) |
186. | The rhetorical construction of kingship in late Anglo -Saxon legal documents and the rise of Cnut's Anglo -Scandinavian empire |
187. | 'On anginne': Anglo -Saxon readings of Genesis |
188. | Wonder, derision, and fear: The uses of doubt in Anglo-Saxon saints' lives |
189. | Writing land in Anglo-Saxon England |
190. | 'People don't want to marry me. People want to marry me. I don't want to marry people': Marriage-plot subversion through repetition in Anglo-American fiction of the 1920s |
191. | Informal ambassadors: American women, transatlantic marriages, and Anglo-American relations, 1865--1945 |
192. | The discourses of childhood: A child-centered critique of Anglo-Caribbean literature |
193. | The linguistic and literary impact of the Norman invasion of England: Royal legal and juridical writings from 1066 to 1189 |
194. | 'The peculiar circumstances of this army': An archaeological study of Anglo-American cultural variability along the Seven Years' War frontier |
195. | Modern writers, modernist problems: A rhetorical hermeneutic approach to the discourses of Anglo-American modernism |
196. | The aesthetics of failure in Anglo-American modernist literature |
197. | Alcuin and Alfred: Two Anglo-Saxon legal reformers |
198. | Wisdom, kingship and royal identity: An examination of the discourse on kingship and rulership in the Anglo-Saxon era |
199. | Perceptions of African American English dialect density by Anglo-European American speech-language pathologists |
200. | Anglo-American rock in Peninsular 'Generation X' fiction |
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