Keyword [Conspiracy] Result: 21 - 40 | Page: 2 of 3 |
21. | Going paranoid from the Cold War to the post-Cold War: Conspiracy fiction of DeLillo, Didion, and Silko |
22. | Dissentive individualism in contemporary American fiction |
23. | Dreadful plots: Conspiracy narratives and political struggle in early nineteenth-century British writing |
24. | A Comparative Study of American and Chinese College Students' Social Trust, Conspiracy Beliefs, and Attitudes Toward Genetically Modified Crops |
25. | Conspiracy culture in America after World War II |
26. | Conspiracy paranoia in the postmodern age: The study of Thomas Pynchon and Haruki Murakami |
27. | Conspiratorial Modernism: Modernism and Conspiracy Theory in Proust, Joyce, Faulkner, and Musil |
28. | The Pleasures of Conspiracy: American Literature 1870--1910 |
29. | 'The conspiracy of capital': American popular radicalism and the politics of conspiracy from Haymarket to the Red Scare |
30. | Towards conspiracy theory: Revolution, terrorism and paranoia from Victorian fiction to the modern novel |
31. | Conspiracy narratives as political rhetoric |
32. | Fear of plot: Conspiracy and the British novel |
33. | Conspiracy in historical phonology |
34. | Conspiracy and the modern novel: A study of Zola, Conrad, and Kafka |
35. | The conspiracy of being: F. W. J. von Schelling and conscientiousness before philosophy's freedom |
36. | A conspiracy of optimism: Sustained yield, multiple use, and intensive management on the national forests, 1945-1991 |
37. | The conspiracy that never was: United States government surveillance of Eastern European American leftists, 1942-1959 |
38. | Miners and Sappers: Lincoln, Conspiracy, and the 1859 Ohio Election |
39. | A Report On The E-C Translation Of Conclave Conspiracy Guided By Relevance Theory Of Translation(Excerpts) |
40. | A Practice Report On The E-C Translation Of Conclave Conspiracy(Excerpts) |
|