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Displaying results 1 to 21 of 21.
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Living death in medieval French and English literature
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Sex and death in eighteenth-century literature
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Graveyard poetry
religion, aesthetics and the mid-eighteenth century poetic condition -
"That the people might live"
loss and renewal in Native American elegy -
Imago mortis
mediating images of death in late medieval culture -
Romanticism, memory and mourning
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Death and fantasy
essays on Philip Pullman, C. S. Lewis, George MacDonald and R. L. Stevenson -
The reparative in narratives
works of mourning in progress -
Women, death and literature in post-Reformation England
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The Arthurian way of death
the English tradition -
Beckett and death
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Grief and genre in American literature, 1790-1870
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Regard for the other
autothanatography in Rousseau, De Quincey, Baudelaire, and Wilde -
Guilty creatures
Renaissance poetry and the ethics of authorship -
Writing death and absence in the Victorian novel
engraved narratives -
Last looks, last books
Stevens, Plath, Lowell, Bishop, Merrill -
Greek and Roman consolations
eight studies of a tradition and its afterlife -
Sex and death in eighteenth-century literature
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Death and fantasy
essays on Philip Pullman, C.S. Lewis, George MacDonald and R.L. Stevenson -
<<The>> carnivalesque defunto
death and the dead in modern Brazilian literature -
Deathly experiments
a study of icons and emblems of mortality in Christopher Marlowe's plays