In this paper the author considers how British novelist P. G. Wodehouse's literary image has transformed, from someone seen as little more than a "common" popular author, to one receiving serious critical inquiry
This paper examines the critical fortunes of Richard Marsh (1857-1915), a best selling author of hor...
In this paper I consider two discourse types, one written and literary, the other spoken and semi-co...
Discusses the early career and later development of the twentieth-century British novelist John Fowl...
This essay strives to explain Wodehouse’s status as a popular writer, whose work is read with enjoym...
At the heart of any examination of literature there lies a germinating thought that grows into an ex...
P. G. Wodehouse offers a serious and sustained critique of English society using the game of cricket...
An analysis of criticism of Charles Dickens by his contemporaries G. H. Lewes and Hippolyte Taine. B...
Graduate Winner: 2nd Place, 2014. 27th Annual Carl Neureuther Student Book Collection Competition
This essay attempts to trace the course of Anthony Trollope's literary reputation; to suggest some e...
The novels written by P.G Wodehouse that feature the characters Jeeves and Wooster are lighthearted ...
The Thesis opens with a brief summary of the ups and downs of Trollope's literary reputation. In the...
This thesis proposes that Shakespeare’s cultural authority was established in England by the end of ...
Reception is a very complex phenomenon. Its study may concern one work or all the works of an author...
Twentieth-century critical assessment of the works of Beaumont and Fletcher usually ranges from char...
none1noDespite being widely recognised as perhaps the greatest humorous novelist in the English lang...
This paper examines the critical fortunes of Richard Marsh (1857-1915), a best selling author of hor...
In this paper I consider two discourse types, one written and literary, the other spoken and semi-co...
Discusses the early career and later development of the twentieth-century British novelist John Fowl...
This essay strives to explain Wodehouse’s status as a popular writer, whose work is read with enjoym...
At the heart of any examination of literature there lies a germinating thought that grows into an ex...
P. G. Wodehouse offers a serious and sustained critique of English society using the game of cricket...
An analysis of criticism of Charles Dickens by his contemporaries G. H. Lewes and Hippolyte Taine. B...
Graduate Winner: 2nd Place, 2014. 27th Annual Carl Neureuther Student Book Collection Competition
This essay attempts to trace the course of Anthony Trollope's literary reputation; to suggest some e...
The novels written by P.G Wodehouse that feature the characters Jeeves and Wooster are lighthearted ...
The Thesis opens with a brief summary of the ups and downs of Trollope's literary reputation. In the...
This thesis proposes that Shakespeare’s cultural authority was established in England by the end of ...
Reception is a very complex phenomenon. Its study may concern one work or all the works of an author...
Twentieth-century critical assessment of the works of Beaumont and Fletcher usually ranges from char...
none1noDespite being widely recognised as perhaps the greatest humorous novelist in the English lang...
This paper examines the critical fortunes of Richard Marsh (1857-1915), a best selling author of hor...
In this paper I consider two discourse types, one written and literary, the other spoken and semi-co...
Discusses the early career and later development of the twentieth-century British novelist John Fowl...