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  1. 14301

    Fiction and Cyberspace: Reading Dickens in the Information Age by Maria Cristina Paganoni

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…Several analogies are detectable between the construction of fictional worlds typical of Victorian novels and digital entertainment media and storytelling genres, while the intense reader engagement Dickens established between his fiction and the social world is remindful of the online/offline identity performance of Internet users. …”
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  2. 14302
  3. 14303

    Kilka uwag o znajomości dzieła Jana Jakuba Rousseau „Emil, czyli o wychowaniu” w Polsce przełomu XVIII i XIX wieku by Dorota Żołądź-Strzelczyk

    Published 2015-06-01
    “…We can see traces of “Emil” both in the memoirs of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, as well as in novels. Among the former, particularly interesting are the memoirs of women – Henrieta z Działyńskich Błędowska and Wiridianna Fiszerowa. …”
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  4. 14304

    Time-Images in Don DeLillo’s Writing: A Reading of The Body Artist, Point Omega and Zero K by Andrea Pitozzi

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Reading DeLillo’s recent novels according to this philosophical framework enables one to consider the implications his writing draws between time and images in configuring the perception of time as an almost physical, substantial and non-subjective whole to be sensed and described through narrative and figurative strategies.…”
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  5. 14305

    MIHI QUAESTIO FACTUS SUM (“I HAVE BECOME A QUESTION TO MYSELF”, AUGUSTINE: CONFESSIONS X. XXXIII): by F. England

    Published 2019-06-01
    “… This article explores a suggested radical instability of knowing human persons – selves and others – and the perennial undecidability of claims about what may be true with respect to them, by employing the novels of Philip Roth and E. L. Doctorow. If persons fundamentally are construed as questions to themselves, as Augustine says, then definitive assertions of what is true about being human are profoundly problematic. …”
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  6. 14306

    De Shirley à Villette : comment Jane Eyre peut-elle vieillir ? by Bernadette Bertrandias

    Published 2006-12-01
    “…While Jane Eyre obliterates the process of getting old, not so for Charlotte’s two subsequent novels which introduce singular characters whose connection with the heroine suggests that ageing is now part of the issue of self development with which her writings are concerned. …”
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  7. 14307

    Historical Topicality in Arnold Bennett and Edward Knoblock’s Milestones by Lukas Klik

    Published 2021-11-01
    “…However, although literary criticism has engaged with his novels, his dramatic oeuvre remains a blind spot in scholarship. …”
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  8. 14308

    Deduction and Geography in Conan Doyle’s A Study in Scarlet by Andréas Pichler

    Published 2015-06-01
    “…Geography relies on tangible scientific information while detective novels create mysteries around whodunnits, notably with Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes adventures. …”
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  9. 14309

    Invisibilidade social a partir do filme “O som ao redor”: uma análise honnethiana das patologias sociais no Brasil by Thiago Aguiar Simim

    Published 2015-01-01
    “…Honneth demonstrates how primarily films and novels can draw attention to social pathologies in the sense pursued in his model of critical theory, thus creating tracks to investigate a particular understanding of a society situated in its time. …”
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  10. 14310

    Biblical Intertextuality in Ferran de Pol by Josep V. Garcia Raffi, Xavier Garcia Raffi

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…We find the greatest biblical presence in his novels Érem quatre (‘We Were Four’, 1960), Miralls tèrbols (‘Cloudy Mirrors’, 1966) and the unpublished Ella, jo i el càntic (She, I and the Song, 1987). …”
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  11. 14311

    Freak Shows on the Page: Defining ‘criminanimality’ in Newgate Fiction (1830-1847) by Hubert Malfray

    Published 2017-03-01
    “…The early Victorian era was marked by a specific concern as regards criminality, a concern that was relayed in literature, notably through Newgate novels. In these, we discover portraits of criminals whose infamy was linked with and defined via the prism of animality. …”
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  12. 14312

    Občevanje organov in strank v sodobnem upravnem postopku by Polona Kovač

    Published 2004-09-01
    “…Pri tem so izpostavljena temeljna pravila, upravna in sodna praksa ter še sveže novosti obsežnejše novele slovenskega Zakona o splošnem upravnem postopku (Uradni list RS, št. 73/04) z začetkom uporabe 1. 1. 2005. …”
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  13. 14313

    Trente ans d'exil en Suisse. José Herrera Petere (Genève, 1947-1977) by Rose Duroux

    Published 2015-03-01
    “…These new circles influenced his work deeply. He no longer wrote novels. The poems he published are bilingual, usually translated by the poets who were friends with him. …”
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  14. 14314

    Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf: an Artist and a Critic? by Liliane Louvel

    Published 2005-12-01
    “…This time, this article will examine the issue from a point of view opposite to the commonly adopted one, that is, it will not examine only what Virginia wrote about painting in her essays, in her letters or in her novels, but first and foremost what Vanessa had to say about painting and literature in the short volume, Sketches in Pen and Ink prefaced by her daughter, which contains most of her essays.…”
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  15. 14315

    Brumes, brouillards et incertitudes dans John Marchmont’s Legacy (1863) de Mary Elizabeth Braddon by Marion Charret-Del Bove

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…Among the several sensation novels that M.E. Braddon (1835-1915) wrote in the early 1860s, there is one that is particularly striking for its repetitive use of mist and fog. …”
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  16. 14316

    La littérature populaire du Kailyard, substrat nécessaire à la Renaissance écossaise by Jean Berton

    Published 2010-06-01
    “…With the benefit of hindsight we can see that the Kailyard movement stands on a strong position between Walter Scott’s novels and the fiction of the end of the Scottish Renaissance.…”
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  17. 14317

    Langage et action paysagère : conscience du paysage et de l’environnement dans l’œuvre de Natsume Sōseki  by Agathe Tran

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Then, through a study of three novels by Sōseki  which focus on describing nature and space rather than following a conventional plot, I consider the landscape as an aesthetic and ideological narrative structure. …”
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  18. 14318

    言語と、風景を形作る行為: 夏目漱石の作品における風景および環境への意識 by Agathe Tran アガタ・トラン

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Then, through a study of three novels by Sōseki  which focus on describing nature and space rather than following a conventional plot, I consider the landscape as an aesthetic and ideological narrative structure. …”
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  19. 14319

    Depictions Of Environmental Destruction By British Colonizers In Ole Kulets “The Hunter” and “Vanishing Herds” by Johnson, Ocan, Francis Akena, Adyanga

    Published 2022
    “…In the article, the study examines the depiction of characters and characterizations in relation to ecology using the renown post-colonial African literature novels ‘Vanishing Herds’ and ‘The Hunter’.…”
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  20. 14320

    Thomas Hardy : une écriture paradoxale entre génération et dégradation entropique by Annie Escuret

    Published 2007-03-01
    “…Just like Turner, he did manage to disrupt the aesthetics of classic realism when he gave up writing novels and wrote The Dynasts. The term « modernism » surfaced in Tess of the D’Urbervilles (1891) when the narrator complains about the creeping industrial « ache of modernism ». …”
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