English fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism
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English fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism
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English fiction
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Incoming Resources
- The rough guide to Philip Pullman's His dark materials, by Paul Simpson
- Bestseller, the books that everyone read, 1900-1939
- Orwell, a man of our time, Richard Bradford
- The counter-memorial impulse in twentieth-century English fiction, Sarah Henstra
- Tenses of imagination, Raymond Williams on science fiction, utopia and dystopia, edited by Andrew Milner
- Tenses of imagination, Raymond Williams on science fiction, utopia and dystopia, Andrew Milner
- Who paid for modernism, art, money, and the fiction of Conrad, Joyce, and Lawrence, Joyce Piell Wexler
- Secret agents in fiction, Ian Fleming, John le Carré and Len Deighton, Lars Ole Sauerberg
- Animal stories, narrating across species lines, Susan McHugh
- Hysterical fictions, the 'Woman's novel' in the twentieth century, Clare Hanson
- Colonialism and the emergence of science fiction, John Rieder
- Fiction of the First World War, a study, George Parfitt
- Multilingualism in modernist fiction, Juliette Taylor-Batty
- Women, science and fiction, the Frankenstein inheritance, Debra Shaw
- Sisters and strangers, an introduction to contemporary feminist fiction, Patricia Duncker
- This thing called the world, the contemporary novel as global form, Debjani Ganguly
- The Contemporary English novel, [Malcolm Bradbury, David Palmer, editors]
- Rewriting English, cultural politics of gender and class, Janet Batsleer ... [et al.]
- Women's fiction and the Great War, edited by Suzanne Raitt and Trudi Tate
- Language of fiction, essays in criticism and verbal analysis of the English novel, David Lodge
- The Cambridge introduction to modern British fiction, 1950-2000, Dominic Head
- Women and children first, the fiction of two world wars, by Mary Cadogan and Patricia Craig
- The literature of war, five studies in heroic virtue, Andrew Rutherford
- A very great profession, the woman's novel 1914-39, Nicola Beauman
- Literary landscapes, from modernism to postcolonialism, edited by Attie de Lange, Gail Fincham, Jeremy Hawthorn and Jakob Lothe
- The Movement, English poetry and fiction of the 1950s, Blake Morrison
- The evolutionary self, Hardy, Forster, Lawrence, Roger Ebbatson
- Ancient cultures of conceit, British university fiction in the post-war years, Ian Carter
- Lies that tell the truth, magic realism seen through contemporary fiction from Britain, Anne C. Hegerfeldt
- Working with structuralism, essays and reviews on nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature, David Lodge
- Home truths, fictions about the South Asian diaspora in Britain, Susheila Nasta
- Contemporary British fiction, edited by Richard Lane, Rod Mengham, and Philip Tew
- Twentieth-century crime fiction, Lee Horsley
- Trauma, postmodernism, and the aftermath of World War II, Paul Crosthwaite
- Twentieth-century crime fiction, gender, sexuality, and the body, Gill Plain
- Plotting change, contemporary women's fiction, editor: Linda Anderson
- Multivalence, the moral quality of form in the modern novel, Alan Warren Friedman
- English fiction of the early modern period 1890-1940, Douglas Hewitt
- Fictions of India, narrative and power, Peter Morey
- Banned in Ireland, censorship and the Irish writer, edited for Article 19 by Julia Carlson
- Four British fantasists, place and culture in the children's fantasies of Penelope Lively, Alan Garner, Diana Wynne Jones and Susan Cooper, Charles Butler
- Women and fiction, feminism and the novel 1880-1920, Patricia Stubbs
- Colonialism and the emergence of science fiction, John Rieder
- Masculinities in British adventure fiction, 1880-1915, Joseph A. Kestner
- Mysteries and conspiracies, detective stories, spy novels and the making of modern societies, Luc Boltanski
- Joseph Conrad, edited by Elaine Jordan
- Land, freedom and fiction, history and ideology in Kenya, David Maughan-Brown
- The novelist at the crossroads, and other essays on fiction and criticism, David Lodge
- Novels & novelists, by Katherine Mansfield; edited by J. Middleton Murry
- Writing women, contemporary women novelists, Olga Kenyon
Outgoing Resources
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