Dorothy Sayers (1893-1957) is famous for her classic crime thrillers featuring Lord Peter Wimsey. In “Gaudy Night” (1936) and “Busman’s Honeymoon” (1937), Wimsey shares the stage with crime writer Harriet Vane: their relationship highlights the issue of the educated woman between the two World Wars. Both Oxford educated, they play a never-ending quotation game: Early Modern English literature has pride of place. In “Busman’s Honeymoon”, Shakespeare is proposed as an indisputable moral authority, asserting the never-wavering rightfulness of the detective, only occasionally hinting at self-righteousness. This is what the present article investigates, by exploring the use of the playwright’s quotations against the issues of criminal, social an...
Starting on the assumption that Shakespeare\u2019s Macbeth should be considered as one of the first ...
This play, written by the researcher, explored the issue of gender and tragedy in Shakespeare’s gre...
Virginia Woolf\u27s comment, \u27Literature is no one\u27s private ground; literature is common grou...
Dorothy Sayers (1893-1957) is famous for her classic crime thrillers featuring Lord Peter Wimsey. In...
This article draws on recent scholarship on Shakespearean allusions and crime fiction to develop an ...
This essay argues that Shakespearean allusion is a recurrent and important factor in the detective n...
Shakespeare is ubiquitous in Virginia Woolf’s works and there is hardly a piece of writing in which ...
Tolkien’s expressed “loathing” for Dorothy Sayers and her novels Gaudy Night and Busman’s Honeymoon ...
Shakespeare is ubiquitous in Virginia Woolf’s works and there is hardly a piece of writing in which ...
This article analyses Shakespeare’s literary discourse as an integral factor among the society where...
International audienceFamously renowned as William Shakespeare’s imaginary sister, whose life Virgin...
Golden Age detective fiction by women offers insights into the competing gender ideologies of the 19...
This essay places Dorothy L. Sayers’s novel Unnatural Death (1927 ) in the context of heightened xen...
Shakespeare returns repeatedly to a false infidelity plotline in his plays. In Much Ado About Nothin...
Shakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, the Survey has p...
Starting on the assumption that Shakespeare\u2019s Macbeth should be considered as one of the first ...
This play, written by the researcher, explored the issue of gender and tragedy in Shakespeare’s gre...
Virginia Woolf\u27s comment, \u27Literature is no one\u27s private ground; literature is common grou...
Dorothy Sayers (1893-1957) is famous for her classic crime thrillers featuring Lord Peter Wimsey. In...
This article draws on recent scholarship on Shakespearean allusions and crime fiction to develop an ...
This essay argues that Shakespearean allusion is a recurrent and important factor in the detective n...
Shakespeare is ubiquitous in Virginia Woolf’s works and there is hardly a piece of writing in which ...
Tolkien’s expressed “loathing” for Dorothy Sayers and her novels Gaudy Night and Busman’s Honeymoon ...
Shakespeare is ubiquitous in Virginia Woolf’s works and there is hardly a piece of writing in which ...
This article analyses Shakespeare’s literary discourse as an integral factor among the society where...
International audienceFamously renowned as William Shakespeare’s imaginary sister, whose life Virgin...
Golden Age detective fiction by women offers insights into the competing gender ideologies of the 19...
This essay places Dorothy L. Sayers’s novel Unnatural Death (1927 ) in the context of heightened xen...
Shakespeare returns repeatedly to a false infidelity plotline in his plays. In Much Ado About Nothin...
Shakespeare Survey is a yearbook of Shakespeare studies and production. Since 1948, the Survey has p...
Starting on the assumption that Shakespeare\u2019s Macbeth should be considered as one of the first ...
This play, written by the researcher, explored the issue of gender and tragedy in Shakespeare’s gre...
Virginia Woolf\u27s comment, \u27Literature is no one\u27s private ground; literature is common grou...