Social classes in literature.
Overview
Works: | 73 works in 11 publications in 11 languages |
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Titles
Subjectivities : = a history of self-representation in Britain, 1832-1920 /
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American sensations = class, empire, and the production of popular culture /
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The lab'ring muses = work, writing, and the social order in English plebeian poetry, 1730-1830 /
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American hungers : = the problem of poverty in U.S. literature, 1840-1945 /
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From custom to capital : = the English novel and the Industrial Revolution /
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The Language of gender and class : = transformation in the Victorian novel /
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Common ground : = eighteenth-century English satiric fiction and the poor /
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Public and private : = gender, class, and the British novel (1764-1878) /
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Contemporary American women writers : = gender, class, ethnicity /
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Social class and stratification : = classic statements and theoretical debates /
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Criminality and narrative in eighteenth-century England : = beyond the law /
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England's internal colonies : = class, capital, and the literature of early modern English colonialism /
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In the master's eye = representations of women, Blacks, and poor whites in antebellum Southern literature /
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The language of gender and class = transformation in the Victorian novel /
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The feminine middlebrow novel, 1920s to 1950s : = class, domesticity, and bohemianism /
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Cruising modernism : = class and sexuality in American literature and social thought /
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Vital contact : = downclassing journeys in American literature from Herman Melville to Richard Wright /
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Love and eugenics in the late nineteenth century : = rational reproduction and the new woman /
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Rereading the Harlem renaissance = race, class, and gender in the fiction of Jessie Fauset, Zora Neale Hurston, and Dorothy West /
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Sports, narrative, and nation in the fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald /
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Property, education, and identity in late eighteenth-century fiction = the heroine of disinterest /
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Longing to belong = the parvenu in nineteenth-century French and German literature /
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Positioning gender and race in (post)colonial plantation space = connecting Ireland and the Caribbean /
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Pinks, pansies, and punks = the rhetoric of masculinity in American literary culture /
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Sapphic primitivism : = productions of race, class, and sexuality in key works of modern fiction /
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Power and class in political fiction = elite theory and the post-war Washington novel /
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Henry James's feminist afterlives = Annie Fields, Emily Dickinson, Marguerite Duras /
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Fictions of resolution in three Victorian novels : = North and South, Our mutual friend, Daniel Deronda /
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Rewriting white = race, class, and cultural capital in nineteenth-century America /
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Figures of finance capitalism = writing, class, and capital in the age of Dickens /
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Writing the ghetto = class, authorship, and the Asian American ethnicenclave /
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Urban underworlds = a geography of twentieth-century American literature and culture /
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