Results 21 to 30 of about 151 (88)
LOVE TO THE TEACHER: CHARLOTTE BRONTЁ IN LETTERS TO CONSTANTINЕ HEGER
The publication of letters of Charlotte Brontё to Constantine Heger whose schoolgirl she was during training in Brussels from 1842 to 1844. Contains the first translation into Russian of four remained letters accompanied with the preface and comments ...
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This essay explores Charlotte Brontë’s 1849 novel Shirley as a literary endeavour to recreate the sibling dynamic of the Brontës’ childhoods, and the psychological effect of being the ‘surviving’ sibling of a formally collaborative unit.
Richardson, Ann-Marie
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The Mystery of the Past Haunts Again: Jane Eyre and Eugenie Marlitt’s Die zweite Frau
Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre is a classic in women’s fiction. When it was published in 1847, it made an immediate impact in mid-Victorian England, partly because it drew on the paradigmatic story of a romance heroine, partly because it interpreted the ...
Ivonne Defant
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Este artículo analiza la recepción de cinco autoras inglesas del siglo xix, Jane Austen, Mary Shelley, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot y Anne Brontë, traducidas al español y publicadas en España durante la época franquista.
Caterina Riba, Carme Sanmartí
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The article analyses how Doris Lessing's short story To Room Nineteen (1963) is a particularly relevant case study because it stages the crisis of language and the very possibility of adopting the realist fiction by inscribing them in the crisis of a ...
Cristina Gamberi
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Male Gaze In Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre and Sutan Takdir Alisjahbana’s Layar Terkembang
This paper aims to discuss how the female body has been an object for male sexual pleasure in patriarchal culture. Female body is considered as the focus of the male gaze.
Siswantia Sar, Nafisa Syahida Rahmadini
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“I Will Throw All on the Altar”: Christianity, Hinduism, and “Human Rights” in Jane Eyre
Through an analysis of Charlotte Brontë’s novel Jane Eyre and her essay “Sacrifice of an Indian Widow”, this essay argues that Brontë positions Christianity as the necessary precursor for the development of secular human rights, and that in so doing she ...
Jason Emmett Collins
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The Deconversion of Harriet Martineau: An Emotional History of Unbelief
Conceptualising the ‘Victorian crisis of faith’ as a phenomenon fuelled by wider intellectual forces can only take us so far in our understanding of it. The loss of faith of many contemporaries did not merely entail an intellectual volte‐face, but also an affective impact. Scholarly accounts have been primarily written by privileging the role of ideas,
Petros Spanou
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Background and Purpose Myeloid‐derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) play important roles in the pathogenesis of asthma. Recent studies demonstrate that their function can be modulated by different pharmacological approaches. In this study, we focussed on the effects of systemically administered prostaglandin EP4 receptor agonist L‐902,688 and pegylated ...
Tim Lange +7 more
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Emily and Charlotte Brontë’s Re-reading of the Byronic hero
The widespread popularity of Byron’s work during the Victorian age introduced several subversive possibilities for reading his characters as icons of transgression and insights into the literary tabooed.
Cristina Ceron
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