Germanistik in Ireland, Interrogating Normalcy, edited by Ann Murray, is a rich and diverse collection of essays from postgraduate students within German Studies. The papers’ literary and historical subjects span three centuries and provide a helpful, wide-ranging insight into current postgraduate research in the field
This article focuses on two novels written by Austrian-born Jewish women writers who were forced int...
Review of Women and the Nazi East: Agents and Witnesses of Germanization by Elizabeth Harve
Krimmer and Simpson’s editorial collaboration brings together an eclectic group of scholars, who fo...
Germanistik in Ireland, Interrogating Normalcy, edited by Ann Murray, is a rich and diverse collecti...
Anne Fuchs, Mary Cosgrove, and Georg Grote. German Memory Contests: The Quest for Identity in Litera...
Review of The Picture Postcard: A New Window into Edwardian Ireland , by Ann Wilson (Oxford: Peter L...
Review of Katherine Arens. Vienna’s Dreams of Europe: Culture and Identity Beyond the Nation-State. ...
Review of Hester Baer and Alexandra Merley Hill, eds. German Women’s Writing in the Twenty-First Cen...
This fourth volume in the Inter-Lit series produced by the Stiftung Frauen-Literatur- Forschung is a...
The article reviews the book Anglo-Irish Autobiography: Class, Gender, and the Forms of Narrative, ...
Mary Cosgrove seeks to explore literary variations on the theme of melancholy in postward German fic...
To review an anthology is always problematic. Of course, the quality of contributions will differ w...
Books Reviewed: Michaela Bank. Women of Two Countries: German-American Women, Women’s Rights, and Na...
Nachdenken über Christa T. is one of the most widely discussed novels in GDR literature, and a revie...
These two books on women writing in early modern England are very different and both make an importa...
This article focuses on two novels written by Austrian-born Jewish women writers who were forced int...
Review of Women and the Nazi East: Agents and Witnesses of Germanization by Elizabeth Harve
Krimmer and Simpson’s editorial collaboration brings together an eclectic group of scholars, who fo...
Germanistik in Ireland, Interrogating Normalcy, edited by Ann Murray, is a rich and diverse collecti...
Anne Fuchs, Mary Cosgrove, and Georg Grote. German Memory Contests: The Quest for Identity in Litera...
Review of The Picture Postcard: A New Window into Edwardian Ireland , by Ann Wilson (Oxford: Peter L...
Review of Katherine Arens. Vienna’s Dreams of Europe: Culture and Identity Beyond the Nation-State. ...
Review of Hester Baer and Alexandra Merley Hill, eds. German Women’s Writing in the Twenty-First Cen...
This fourth volume in the Inter-Lit series produced by the Stiftung Frauen-Literatur- Forschung is a...
The article reviews the book Anglo-Irish Autobiography: Class, Gender, and the Forms of Narrative, ...
Mary Cosgrove seeks to explore literary variations on the theme of melancholy in postward German fic...
To review an anthology is always problematic. Of course, the quality of contributions will differ w...
Books Reviewed: Michaela Bank. Women of Two Countries: German-American Women, Women’s Rights, and Na...
Nachdenken über Christa T. is one of the most widely discussed novels in GDR literature, and a revie...
These two books on women writing in early modern England are very different and both make an importa...
This article focuses on two novels written by Austrian-born Jewish women writers who were forced int...
Review of Women and the Nazi East: Agents and Witnesses of Germanization by Elizabeth Harve
Krimmer and Simpson’s editorial collaboration brings together an eclectic group of scholars, who fo...