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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Looking Back: A Review Of Company: A Chosen Life And Smashing The Piano By John Montague, Tyler Farrell
Looking Back: A Review Of Company: A Chosen Life And Smashing The Piano By John Montague, Tyler Farrell
English Faculty Research and Publications
No abstract provided.
Refiguring National Character: The Remains Of The British Estate Novel, John J. Su
Refiguring National Character: The Remains Of The British Estate Novel, John J. Su
English Faculty Research and Publications
No abstract provided.
Review: Material Matters: Bodies And Rhetoric, Krista Ratcliffe
Review: Material Matters: Bodies And Rhetoric, Krista Ratcliffe
English Faculty Research and Publications
No abstract provided.
Review Of Colum Mccann’S Everything In This Country Must, Tyler Farrell
Review Of Colum Mccann’S Everything In This Country Must, Tyler Farrell
English Faculty Research and Publications
No abstract provided.
Inventing The Gothic Subject: Revolution, Secularization, And The Discourse Of Suffering, Diane Hoeveler
Inventing The Gothic Subject: Revolution, Secularization, And The Discourse Of Suffering, Diane Hoeveler
English Faculty Research and Publications
In 1816, Byron's Childe Harold bemoaned: "What deep wounds ever closed without a scar?/The heart's bleed longest, and but heal to wear/That which disfigures it" (III, 84), a fitting expression of the culture's fascination with psychic, emotional, and historical traumas. Felicia Hemans used these exact lines as an epigraph to her poem "The Indian City" in 1828, suggesting again the fascination with suffering that permeated the texts produced by this literary community.