Up a level |
- Library of Congress Subject Areas (8)
- P Language and Literature (8)
- PN Literature (General) (8)
- PN45 Theory. Philosophy. Esthetics (8)
- PN Literature (General) (8)
- P Language and Literature (8)
Number of items at this level: 8.
- Chamberlain, R. (2015) What's happiness in Hamlet? In: Meek, R. and Sullivan, E. (eds.) The Renaissance of Emotion: Understanding Affect in Shakespeare and his Contemporaries. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 153-174.
- Chamberlain, R. (2011) What’s happiness in Hamlet? Invited Presentation presented to: Shakespeare and Early Modern Emotion, University of Hull, 29 June - 01 July 2011. (Unpublished)
- Chamberlain, R. (2011) Shakespeare's refusers: humanism at the limit. In: Mousley, A. (ed.) Towards a New Literary Humanism. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 98-112.
- Chamberlain, R. (2011) 'Most retrograde to our desire': translating recusant identity in Hamlet. In: Oakley-Brown, L. (ed.) Shakespeare and the Translation of Identity in Early Modern England. London: Continuum. pp. 131-68.
- Phillips, L. (2010) Truth in violence: ethical atavism in J G Ballard's sub/urban nightmares. In: Brie, S. and Rossiter, W. T. (eds.) Literature and Ethics: From the Green Knight to the Dark Knight. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Press.
- Starr, M. (2015) Joss Whedon and poststructural pedagogy. Paper presented to: Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) 2015 Annual Conference, New Orleans, 01-04 April 2015. (Unpublished)
- Starr, M. (2014) "I always watch what I say. I am what I say”: Joss Whedon as Deleuzian “Minor Writer”. Paper presented to: 6th Biennial Slayage Conference on the Whedonverses (SCW6), University of California, Sacramento, 19-22 June 2014. (Unpublished)
- Wilson, J. M. (2014) Katherine Mansfield, Virginia Woolf and anima mundi. Invited Presentation presented to: "Unattended Moments": The Medieval Presence in the Modernist Aesthetic, Department of English, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand, 02-05 April 2014. (Unpublished)