ATTENTION: The software behind KU ScholarWorks is being upgraded to a new version. Starting July 15th, users will not be able to log in to the system, add items, nor make any changes until the new version is in place at the end of July. Searching for articles and opening files will continue to work while the system is being updated.
If you have any questions, please contact Marianne Reed at mreed@ku.edu .
English Scholarly Works: Recent submissions
Now showing items 121-140 of 317
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Brecht and the Mothers of Epic Theatre
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991-12-01)Despite the growing criticism of Bertolt Brecht's use of women in the theater, it cannot be denied that the most prominent and interesting roles in his later plays are female. Not only did he have the incentive of writing ... -
Crusoe's Farther Adventures: Discovery, Trade, and the Law of Nations
(University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997-09-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
Faulkner's Light in August: A Novel in Black and White
(University of Arizona, 1984-12-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
The semiotics of the theater of cruelty
(De Gruyter, 1985-01-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
Slowly Along The Riverbeds
(Coal City Review Press, 1999) -
The Late Show
(Coal City Review Press, 2010) -
Two Writers Sharing: Sterling A. Brown, Robert Frost, and In "Dives's Dive"
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997-09-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
Whitman and Race ('he's queer, he's unclear, get used to it...')
(Cambridge University Press, 2002-08-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
The Machinate Literary Animal: Butlerian Science for the Twenty-first Century
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014-12-01)Current inquiry into nongenetic forms of inheritance has deep roots in the nineteenth century. Samuel Butler’s evolutionary science writing and fiction points ahead, beyond the twentieth-century dismissal of pre-Darwinian ... -
Domesticity and Dispossession: Removal as a Family Act in Cooper's The Wept of Wish-ton-Wish and The Pathfinder
(University of Rhode Island, 2002-03-01) -
Science Fiction Research Collections at the University of Kansas
(SF-TH, 2010-07-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
Somebody Blew off Baraka
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003-06-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
English Witness Depositions 1560–1760: An Electronic Edition
(De Gruyter Open, 2007-04-01)The following is from a servant’s testimony, recorded in 1654 in south-east England: [...] this Informant saied to the said Susan haue a care or els you will sett the barne on a fire: And the said Susan replyed ... -
Conjuncts in Nineteenth-Century English: Diachronic Development and Genre Diversity
(Cambridge University Press, 2014-02-06)This article explores the use of connective adverbials or conjuncts (e.g. therefore, on the other hand, firstly) in nineteenth-century English. Drawing on A Corpus of Nineteenth-Century English (CONCE), the study focuses ... -
The Fusion of Ideas: An Interview with Margaret Walker Alexander
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993-06-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
An Interview with Edward P. Jones
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008-11-01)Edward P. Jones is a writer of the kind of fiction one might have thought was going out of style: readable, absorbing, and exquisitely literary. After a startling publishing debut with Lost in the City, stories drawn from ... -
Measuring Faulkner's Tall Convict
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982-09-01)No abstract is available for this item. -
"In Another Country": Faulkner's A Fable
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987-03-01)Although the setting of A Fable is ostensibly France during the years of World War I, William Faulkner seems to have rejected this unambiguous designation of the time and place of his novel. In a letter to Robert Haas ... -
Faulkner's Return to the Freudian Father: Sanctuary Reconsidered
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004-06-01)Faulkner's disclaimer that he was "not familiar with" Freud (Faulkner in the University 268) often has been regarded skeptically by scholars. John T. Irwin, for example, identifies Freudian allusions in Mosquitoes (1927) ... -
Beyond Oedipus: Lucas Beauchamp, Ned Barnett, and Faulkner's Intruder in the Dust
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007-01-01)Read for its latent meanings, Intruder in the Dust traces the cause of racial lynchings to a model of identity formation based in exclusionary tactics. At this symbolic level, the novel's two central developments, the mob ...