Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020This dissertation examines the genre of the author-published familiar letter to consider the ways in which people come to understand themselves as part of a public, and as actors who might affect the shape of that public. Chapter 1, on Alexander Pope’s Mr. Pope’s Literary Correspondence (1735-7), and Chapter 2, on Mary Wollstonecraft’s Letters Written During a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark (1796) look at eighteenth century British volumes—written and published in a culture of letter-writing when the standards of epistolary writing are strongly expressed and familiar to readers. Chapter 3, on Dodie Bellamy’s The Letters of Mina Harker (1998) examines the structural capacities of ...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.Despite her ear...
This dissertation argues that nineteenth-century British writers, in responding to the rise of mass ...
The article analyses the connection between modalities of letter writing and the relation between wr...
This dissertation examines public letters in England during the period spanning the English Civil Wa...
This thesis reads five examples of correspondence from the perspective of the unique dialogic relati...
My dissertation examines epistolary exchanges in the 1830-1850 transatlantic world as vehicles for t...
Thesis advisor: Marjorie HowesEpistolary Modernism reads British and Irish writing of the 1920s thro...
My thesis charts a history of the chapter epigraph through the eighteenth-century periodical, and th...
grantor: University of TorontoAlthough the letter has long been valued as an object of mat...
Examining significant moments of women's letter-writing from throughout the late medieval and early ...
This dissertation tracks representations of orators in a constellation of British texts throughout t...
Considering the emergence of epistolary theory in mid-sixteenth-century England, its value and funct...
Since the late twentieth century, letters in literature have seen a remarkable renaissance. The prom...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002This dissertation examines eighteenth-century English...
In this keynote address, Professor Liz Stanley sketches out some ideas about how to theorise and use...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.Despite her ear...
This dissertation argues that nineteenth-century British writers, in responding to the rise of mass ...
The article analyses the connection between modalities of letter writing and the relation between wr...
This dissertation examines public letters in England during the period spanning the English Civil Wa...
This thesis reads five examples of correspondence from the perspective of the unique dialogic relati...
My dissertation examines epistolary exchanges in the 1830-1850 transatlantic world as vehicles for t...
Thesis advisor: Marjorie HowesEpistolary Modernism reads British and Irish writing of the 1920s thro...
My thesis charts a history of the chapter epigraph through the eighteenth-century periodical, and th...
grantor: University of TorontoAlthough the letter has long been valued as an object of mat...
Examining significant moments of women's letter-writing from throughout the late medieval and early ...
This dissertation tracks representations of orators in a constellation of British texts throughout t...
Considering the emergence of epistolary theory in mid-sixteenth-century England, its value and funct...
Since the late twentieth century, letters in literature have seen a remarkable renaissance. The prom...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2002This dissertation examines eighteenth-century English...
In this keynote address, Professor Liz Stanley sketches out some ideas about how to theorise and use...
Thesis (M.A., English (Literature)) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009.Despite her ear...
This dissertation argues that nineteenth-century British writers, in responding to the rise of mass ...
The article analyses the connection between modalities of letter writing and the relation between wr...