Keyword [Shirley] Result: 1 - 20 | Page: 1 of 2 |
1. | The Visibility Of A Translator-Exampled By Lin Yutang's Translation Of Fu Sheng Liu Ji |
2. | The Writing Of Female Illness In Charlotte Bront(?)s Shirley |
3. | Seeking Identity And Home - Interpreting Shirley Hazard 's Three Novels |
4. | A Study On The Promotion Of American Anti - Monopoly Process By Shirley Revelation Movement |
5. | Radical And Conservative Opposition And Balance |
6. | Construction Of Cultural Identities From The Postcolonial Perspective |
7. | Humorous Characterization In Shirley Jackson’s Life Among The Savages And Raising Demons |
8. | An Interpretation Of The Hauntins Of Hill House From The Perspective Of Greimassian Theory |
9. | A Report On The Interpreting For “Seminar Of Professor Shirley Wood's Education Thoughts” |
10. | A Study Of The Diasporic Identity In Shirley Geok-lin Lim's Joss And Gold |
11. | A Study Of Female Gothic In Shirley Jackson's The Lottery And Other Stories |
12. | Shirley Jackson's 'The Lottery': A bio-cultural investigation into reader-response, 1948--2006 |
13. | Looking for the gaze of love: Paranoia, hysteria, and the masochism in the Gothic (Charlotte Dacre, Charlotte Bronte, Ann Sophia Radcliffe, Shirley Jackson) |
14. | A geophysical investigation: Locating the Native American settlement at Fort Shirley |
15. | Ivory towers and Ivory Soap: Composition, housewife humor and domestic gothic, 1940--1970 (Erma Bombeck, Jean Kerr, Shirley Jackson) |
16. | Embodied disturbances: Disability and freakishness in Shirley Jackson's anxious horror |
17. | Inventing transnational Chinese American identities in Amy Tan's 'The Joy Luck Club', Shirley Geok-Lin Lim's 'Among the White Moon Faces', and Shawn Hsu Wong's 'American Knees' |
18. | 'Sende this booke ageyne hoome to Shirley': John Shirley and the circulation of manuscripts in fifteenth-century England |
19. | Domestic disorder: Women in American film comedy, 1930--1940 (Marie Dressler, Mae West, Shirley Temple, Lupe Velez) |
20. | Ghost-writing into eternity: Representations of the woman author as spirit/conjurer (Edith Wharton, Shirley Jackson, Alison Lurie, Joyce Carol Oates, Sylvia Plath) |
|