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Robert Louis Stevenson and the ‘Optic Nerve’. Portraiture in Weir of Hermiston
Published 2006-12-01Get full text
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Roslyn Jolly, Robert Louis Stevenson in the Pacific, Travel, Empire, and the Author’s Profession
Published 2010-12-01Get full text
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‘Here gather daily those young eaglets of glory’: Robert Louis Stevenson, the Savile Club and the Suicide Club
Published 2015-06-01“…The Savile Club prided itself in being more relaxed and friendly than most other gentlemen’s clubs in London in the second half of the nineteenth century, welcoming ‘men of promise’ at the start of their careers. Robert Louis Stevenson, one of these young men of promise, relished the social opportunities of the club, especially the company of fellow bohemians but was also aware of the limitations of the club, and its potential for complacency and false posturing. …”
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On the Possibility and Plurality of Worlds: from The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde to Le Crime étrange de Mr Hyde
Published 2004-12-01Subjects: Get full text
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‘To sin in loving virtue’: desire and possession in Measure for Measure
Published 2013-01-01Subjects: “…Robert Louis Stevenson…”
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In the Footsteps of Footsteps: Holmes and Stevenson in the Cévennes
Published 2008-05-01Subjects: “…Robert Louis Stevenson…”
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„Dark medicine” w wydaniu popkulturowym. Recenzja: Agnieszka Trześniewska-Nowak, „W kleszczach lęku. Thriller medyczny w literaturze i kulturze popularnej”, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytet...
Published 2025-02-01“…Examples that support it (novels by Herbert George Wells, Bram Stoker, and Robert Louis Stevenson) are also controversial. Despite its shortcomings, Trześniewska-Nowak’s book is nevertheless important as a pioneering study in the field that oversteps the boundaries of literary creation and enters the public imaginary. …”
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