This essay seeks to demonstrate that Courtney Milan’s The Duke Who Didn’t (2020) is a “novel of ideas” which challenges readers to examine the concept of “historical accuracy” and the racism that may be perpetuated by its invocation. The historical context in which the novel itself emerged is also examined
When studying American history, it is easy to dismiss racism as a thing of the past, something that ...
This article was a result of the library research which was conducted by using Gramscian hegemony th...
This essay examines the appropriation of medieval history by far-right British publications in the 1...
At the 2017 rally in Charlottesville, white supremacists carried banners covered in medieval heraldr...
This dissertation analyzes three historical romance novels—Secrets of a Scandalous Heiress by Theres...
Historical romance novels form a large subgenre of romance fiction. Authors work to include verisimi...
This essay uses an intersectional approach to identify in the drama of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess o...
Describes and analyzes two episodes of article rejections based on political correctness and several...
This essay uses an intersectional approach to identify in the drama of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess o...
This essay discusses some difficulties of teaching Renaissance engagements with race, class, and gen...
My thesis examines four popular romance novels from the 1970s to 2010s: The Flame and the Flower by ...
Debates about history and fiction tend to pitch novelist against historian in a battle over who owns...
This essay begins by claiming that much conventional usage of fictional literature as historical evi...
Nominee of the English Undergraduate Studies Research Forum AwardIn my thesis I explore the historic...
English-language mass-market romance novels written by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color...
When studying American history, it is easy to dismiss racism as a thing of the past, something that ...
This article was a result of the library research which was conducted by using Gramscian hegemony th...
This essay examines the appropriation of medieval history by far-right British publications in the 1...
At the 2017 rally in Charlottesville, white supremacists carried banners covered in medieval heraldr...
This dissertation analyzes three historical romance novels—Secrets of a Scandalous Heiress by Theres...
Historical romance novels form a large subgenre of romance fiction. Authors work to include verisimi...
This essay uses an intersectional approach to identify in the drama of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess o...
Describes and analyzes two episodes of article rejections based on political correctness and several...
This essay uses an intersectional approach to identify in the drama of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess o...
This essay discusses some difficulties of teaching Renaissance engagements with race, class, and gen...
My thesis examines four popular romance novels from the 1970s to 2010s: The Flame and the Flower by ...
Debates about history and fiction tend to pitch novelist against historian in a battle over who owns...
This essay begins by claiming that much conventional usage of fictional literature as historical evi...
Nominee of the English Undergraduate Studies Research Forum AwardIn my thesis I explore the historic...
English-language mass-market romance novels written by BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color...
When studying American history, it is easy to dismiss racism as a thing of the past, something that ...
This article was a result of the library research which was conducted by using Gramscian hegemony th...
This essay examines the appropriation of medieval history by far-right British publications in the 1...