English fiction + History and criticism
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English fiction + History and criticism
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English fiction + History and criticism
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Incoming Resources
- The Oxford history of the novel in English, edited by Patrick Parrinder and Andrzej Gasiorek, Volume 4
- Experience in the novel, selected papers from the English Institute, edited with a foreword by Roy Harvey Pearce
- Loving with a vengeance, mass-produced fantasies for women, Tania Modleski
- Freedom's empire, race and the rise of the novel in Atlantic modernity, 1640-1940, Laura Doyle
- Popular fiction, technology, ideology, production, reading, Tony Bennett
- The heroine's bookshelf, life lessons, from Jane Austen to Laura Ingalls Wilder, Erin Blakemore
- Faulks on fiction, great British characters and the secret life of the novel, Sebastian Faulks
- Lives of the novelists, a history of fiction in 294 lives, John Sutherland
- Delusions and discoveries, India in the British imagination, 1880-1930, Benita Parry ; [with a foreword by Michael Sprinker]
- The English novel /, Smollett to Austen, edited and introduced by Richard Kroll
- Living fiction, reading the British novel from Daniel Defoe to Julian Barnes, William Hutchings
- Fiction and the ways of knowing, essays on British novels, by Avrom Fleishman
- The politics of reflexivity, narrative and the constitutive poetics of culture, Robert Siegle
- Aspects of the novel
- The literature of place, edited by Norman Page and Peter Preston
- Reader, I married him, a study of the women characters of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, Elizabeth Gaskell and George Eliot, Patricia Beer
- Style in fiction, a linguistic introduction to English fictional prose, Geoffrey Leech and Mick Short
- The great tradition, George Eliot, Henry James, Joseph Conrad, F. R. Leavis
- Aspects of the novel, and related writings, E.M. Forster
- The gothic novel, by Brendan Hennessy
- Aspects of the novel, E.M. Forster ; edited by Oliver Stallybrass with an introduction by Frank Kermode
- London writing, Merlin Coverley
- Fiction, crime, and empire, clues to modernity and postmodernism, Jon Thompson
- The World broke in two, Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot, D. H. Lawrence, E. M. Forster and the year that changed literature
- The uses of phobia, essays on literature and film, David Trotter
- Living fiction, reading the British novel from Daniel Defoe to Julian Barnes, William Hutchings
- The great tradition, George Eliot, Henry James, Joseph Conrad, F.R. Leavis
- House of fiction, from Pemberley to Brideshead, great British houses in literature and life, Phyllis Richardson
- Can Jane Eyre be happy?, more puzzles in classic fiction, John Sutherland
- Inconsequence, lesbian representation and the logic of sexual sequence, Annamarie Jagose
- The supernatural and English fiction, Glen Cavaliero
- Thinking about women, Mary Ellmann
- The English novel /, 1700 to Fielding, edited and introduced by Richard Kroll
- The Tidy house, little girls writing, [by] Carolyn Steedman
- The implied reader, patterns of communication in prose fiction from Bunyan to Beckett, by Wolfgang Iser ; [translated from the German]
- The Cambridge companion to English novelists, edited by Adrian Poole
- At Vanity Fair, from Bunyan to Thackeray, Kirsty Milne ; afterword by Sharon Achinstein
- Autistic disturbances, theorizing autism poetics from the DSM to Robinson Crusoe, Julia Miele Rodas ; with a foreword by Melanie Yergeau
- The nature novel from Hardy to Lawrence, John Alcorn
- The female imagination, a literary and psychological investigation of women's writing, Patricia Meyer Spacks
- Allegories of empire, the figure of woman in the colonial text, Jenny Sharpe
- The Progress of romance, the politics of popular fiction, edited by Jean Radford
- Living space in fact and fiction, Philippa Tristram
- About time, narrative, fiction and the philosophy of time, Mark Currie
- Dickens and his readers, aspects of novel-criticism since 1836, by George H. Ford
- Family fictions, Nikki Gamble and Nick Tucker
- Dressed in fiction, Clair Hughes
- Nation & novel, the English novel from its origins to the present day, Patrick Parrinder
- You're a brick, Angela!, the girls' story 1839-1985, by Mary Cadogan and Patricia Craig
- The structure of the novel, Edwin Muir