This article analyses the role of the Arthurian tradition in the early Harry Potter novels, uncovering the complex web of sources and influences beneath these apparently simple children's novels
When Bloomsbury published Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in 1997, Joanne Kathleen Rowling ...
As Harry Potter and his friends grow, so do the intended readers, who supposedly mirror the protagon...
With the publication of the seventh and final novel in the Harry Potter sequence, Harry Potter and t...
Examines the influence of the landscape and structure of Arthurian legends on the world of Rowling’s...
The article is a reading of the four volumes of the Harry Potter saga; starting by recent critical i...
This article tries to show whether the fantastical and magical elements in literary fiction such as ...
Many texts exist that dwell upon the origins and meanings of the Harry Potter phenomenon, termed so ...
This thesis is a study of the first four books of J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series. It accounts f...
This article reports findings from a small-scale focus group study funded by the British Academy whi...
My intentions with this essay has been to examine the World in which the story of J. K. Rowlings Har...
In this article originally published in Public Books, Daniel Pollack-Pelzner offers commentary on th...
Kara Lynn Andersen, in her paper Harry Potter and the Susceptible Child Audience, argues for a ret...
Joanne K Rowling's Harry Potter novels have been an astonishing publishing success with over 30...
Abstract The Harry Potter novels, since the publication of the first book of the series in 1997, hav...
Seven books in the Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling have broken sales records worldwide. They ha...
When Bloomsbury published Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in 1997, Joanne Kathleen Rowling ...
As Harry Potter and his friends grow, so do the intended readers, who supposedly mirror the protagon...
With the publication of the seventh and final novel in the Harry Potter sequence, Harry Potter and t...
Examines the influence of the landscape and structure of Arthurian legends on the world of Rowling’s...
The article is a reading of the four volumes of the Harry Potter saga; starting by recent critical i...
This article tries to show whether the fantastical and magical elements in literary fiction such as ...
Many texts exist that dwell upon the origins and meanings of the Harry Potter phenomenon, termed so ...
This thesis is a study of the first four books of J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series. It accounts f...
This article reports findings from a small-scale focus group study funded by the British Academy whi...
My intentions with this essay has been to examine the World in which the story of J. K. Rowlings Har...
In this article originally published in Public Books, Daniel Pollack-Pelzner offers commentary on th...
Kara Lynn Andersen, in her paper Harry Potter and the Susceptible Child Audience, argues for a ret...
Joanne K Rowling's Harry Potter novels have been an astonishing publishing success with over 30...
Abstract The Harry Potter novels, since the publication of the first book of the series in 1997, hav...
Seven books in the Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling have broken sales records worldwide. They ha...
When Bloomsbury published Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in 1997, Joanne Kathleen Rowling ...
As Harry Potter and his friends grow, so do the intended readers, who supposedly mirror the protagon...
With the publication of the seventh and final novel in the Harry Potter sequence, Harry Potter and t...