Self in literature
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Self in literature
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- "Blighted beginnings" : coming of age in independent Ireland
- "Je," "il," and "vous" : narrator, protagonist, and narratee from Jean Santeuil to A la recherche
- "Littery man" : Mark Twain and modern authorship
- "Nuevos casos, nuevas artes" : intertextualidad, autorrepresentación e ideología en la obra de Juan Boscán
- "The stranger within thee" : concepts of the self in late-eighteenth-century literature
- "We are three sisters" : self and family in the writing of the Brontës
- "Who, what am I?" : Tolstoy struggles to narrate the self
- 'Re/visioning' the self away from home : autobiographical and cross-cultural dimensions in the works of Paule Marshall
- (In)scribing body/landscape relations
- A choice of inheritance : self and community from Edmund Burke to Robert Frost
- A genealogy of the modern self : Thomas De Quincey and the intoxication of writing
- A mind that feeds upon infinity : the deep self in English romantic poetry
- A new species of man : the poetic persona of W.B. Yeats
- A poetics of women's autobiography : marginality and the fictions of self-representation
- Acto de presencia : la escritura autobiográfica en Hispanoamérica
- Adapted brains and imaginary worlds : cognitive science and the literature of the Renaissance
- Adorno and modern theatre : the drama of the damaged self in Bond, Rudkin, Barker and Kane
- Aeneas und Vergil : Untersuchungen zur poetologischen Dimension der Aeneis
- Aesthetic autobiography : from life to art in Marcel Proust, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Anaïs Nin
- Africa writes back to self : metafiction, gender, sexuality
- After Dionysus : a theory of the tragic
- After confession : poetry as autobiography
- Amnesiac selves : nostalgia, forgetting, and British fiction, 1810-1870
- Anaïs Nin and the remaking of self : gender, modernism, and narrative identity
- Anger, guilt, and the psychology of the self in Clarissa
- Anne Brontë
- Anxieties of interiority and dissection in early modern Spain
- Apology to apostrophe : autobiography and the rhetoric of self-representation in Spain
- Architects of the self : George Eliot, D. H. Lawrence, and E. M. Forster
- Architexts of memory : literature, science, and autobiography
- Arthur Conan Doyle and the meaning of masculinity
- Aspects of subjectivity : society and individuality from the Middle Ages to Shakespeare and Milton
- At face value : autobiographical writing in Spanish America
- Atonement and self-sacrifice in nineteenth-century narrative
- Authoring the self : self-representation, authorship, and the print market in British poetry from Pope through Wordsworth
- Authority and speech : language, society, and self in the American novel
- Authors to themselves : Milton and the revelation of history
- Autobiographical voices : race, gender, self-portraiture
- Autobiographical writing and British literature, 1783-1834
- Autobiography : the self made text
- Autobiography and authorship in Renaissance verse : chronicles of the self
- Autobiography and natural science in the age of Romanticism : Rousseau, Goethe, Thoreau
- Autobiography and the existential self : studies in modern French writing
- Autobiography in Shakespeare's plays : lands so by his father lost
- Autobiography in Shakespeare's plays : lands so by his father lost
- Autobiography in Walker Percy : repetition, recovery, and redemption
- Autobiography in seventeenth-century England : theology and the self
- Autobiography, ecology, and the well-placed self : the growth of natural biography in contemporary American life writing
- Beckett writing Beckett : the author in the autograph
- Becoming Wordsworthian : a performative aesthetics
- Becoming both real and true : the fantastic self in the fiction of Margaret Mahy
- Being in the text : self-representation from Wordsworth to Roland Barthes
- Ben Jonson and self-love : the subtlest maze of all
- Betraying our selves : forms of self-representation in early modern English texts
- Beyond the heroic "I" : reading Lawrence, Hemingway, and "masculinity"
- Beyond understanding : appeals to the imagination, passions, and will in mid-nineteenth-century American women's fiction
- Bioethics and biolaw through literature
- Bodies and selves in early modern England : physiology and inwardness in Spenser, Shakespeare, Herbert, and Milton
- Borges and philosophy : self, time, and metaphysics
- Boundaries of the self : gender, culture, fiction
- Breaking new ground : the transgressive poetics of Claudio Rodríguez
- Byron and the myth of tradition
- Byron's othered self and voice : contextualizing the homographic signature
- Canonical states, canonical stages : Oedipus, othering, and seventeenth-century drama
- Catullus and the poetics of Roman manhood
- Ce monstre incomparable-- : Malraux, ou, L'énigme du moi
- Centring the self : subjectivity, society, and reading from Thomas Gray to Thomas Hardy
- Ceremonies of innocence : pastoralism in the poetry of Edmund Spenser
- Charles Dickens and the romantic self
- Charlotte Brontë : the self conceived
- Charlotte Brontë and Victorian psychology
- Charlotte Brontë and defensive conduct : the author and the body at risk
- Chaucer's French contemporaries : the poetry/poetics of self and tradition
- Coleridge, Wordsworth, and romantic autobiography : reading strategies of self-representation
- Colette and the conquest of self
- Colette and the fantom subject of autobiography
- Comic women, tragic men : a study of gender and genre in Shakespeare
- Confession and resistance : defining the self in late medieval England
- Constructing the literary self : race and gender in twentieth-century literature
- Consuming autobiographies : reading and writing the self in post-war France
- Converging truths : Euripides' Ion and the Athenian quest for self-definition
- Costly monuments : representations of the self in George Herbert's poetry
- Country parsons, country poets : George Herbert and Gerard Manley Hopkins as spiritual autobiographers
- Creating another self : voice in modern American personal poetry
- Creating the self in the contemporary American theatre
- Creation's very self ; : on the personal element in recent American poetry
- Creative development in Marcel Proust's A la recherche du temps perdu
- D.H. Lawrence : self and sexuality
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti and the late Victorian sonnet sequence : sexuality, belief and the self
- Das lyrische Ich : Erscheinungsformen gattungseigentüml. Autor-Subjektivität in der engl. Lyrik
- De l'autobiographie à la mise en scène de soi : le cas Rousseau
- Declamation, paternity, and Roman identity : authority and the rhetorical self
- Declarations of independency in eighteenth-century American autobiography
- Democratic personality : popular voice and the trial of American authorship
- Desire and repression : the dialectic of self and other in the late works of Henry James
- Desire, the self, the social critic : the rise of queer performance within the demise of transcendentalism
- Determined fictions : American literary naturalism
- Diary fiction : writing as action
- Dickens and romantic psychology : the self in time in nineteenth-century literature
- Dickens and the dialectic of growth
- Dickens imagining himself : six novel encounters with a changing world
- Dickens in search of himself : recurrent themes and characters in the work of Charles Dickens
- Discerning the subject
- Discovering ourselves in Whitman : the contemporary American long poem
- Discovering the subject in Renaissance England
- Dislocations of desire : gender, identity, and strategy in La regenta
- Disorienting fiction : the autoethnographic work of nineteenth-century British novels
- Domestic individualism : imagining self in nineteenth-century America
- Dramas of solitude : narratives of retreat in American nature writing
- Dying in character : memoirs on the end of life
- Dynamic dichotomy : the poetic "I" in fourteenth- and fifteenth-century French lyric poetry
- Echo chambers : figuring voice in modern narrative
- Ecocriticism : creating self and place in environmental and American Indian literatures
- Eighteenth-century authorship and the play of fiction : novels and the theater, Haywood to Austen
- Elegiac fictions : the motif of the unlived life
- Eliot, James, and the fictional self : a study in character and narration
- Embodied : Victorian literature and the senses
- Emerson in his sermons : a man-made self
- Emerson's emergence : self and society in the transformation of New England, 1800-1845
- Encountering choran community : literary modernism, visual culture, and political aesthetics in the interwar years
- Engendering the subject : gender and self-representation in contemporary women's fiction
- Entangled voices : genre and the religious construction of the self
- Escape from the prison of love : caloric identities and writing subjects in fifteenth-century Spain
- Essais de soi : poesie spirituelle et rapport a soi, entre Montaigne et Descartes
- Essays in self-portraiture : a comparison of technique in the self-portraits of Montaigne and Rembrandt
- Essays on life writing : from genre to critical practice
- Ethical encounters : spaces and selves in the writings of Rudy Wiebe
- Eugene O'Neill's last plays : separating art from autobiography
- Everyday and prophetic : the poetry of Lowell, Ammons, Merrill, and Rich
- Expressions of self in Chinese literature
- Faber suae fortunae : l'autoformation du sujet chez Mme de Lafayette, Marivaux et Stendhal
- Fables de la personne : pour une histoire de la subjectivité
- Fables of the self : studies in lyric poetry
- Fantasy, forgery, and the Byron legend
- Fashioning faces : the portraitive mode in British romanticism
- Fatal autonomy : Romantic drama and the rhetoric of agency
- Faulkner : the transfiguration of biography
- Fictions in autobiography : studies in the art of self invention
- Fictions of the female self : Charlotte Brontë, Olive Schreiner, Katherine Mansfield
- Figures of autobiography : the language of self-writing in Victorian and modern England
- First-person fictions : Pindar's poetic "I"
- Flesh and spirit in the songs of Homer : a study of words and myths
- Fliehkräfte der Moderne : zur Ich-Konstitution in der Lyrik des frühen 20. Jahrhunderts
- Forests of symbols : world, text & self in Malcolm Lowry's fiction
- Formen selbstreflexiven Erzählens : eine Typologie und sechs exemplarische Analysen
- Framing authority : sayings, self, and society in sixteenth-century England
- From copyright to Copperfield : the identity of Dickens
- From the perspective of the self : Montaigne's self-portrait
- Gaiety transfigured : gay self-representation in American literature
- Gender and the sacred self in John Donne
- Genèse de la conscience moderne : études sur le développement de la conscience de soi dans les littératures du monde occidental
- George Moore and the autogenous self : the autobiography and fiction
- George Sand's Nouvelles : reflections, perceptions, and the self
- God, self, and death : the shape of religious transformation in the Second Temple period
- Gothic modernisms
- Habit in the English novel, 1850-1900 : lived environments, practices of the self
- Haunted selves, haunting places in English literature and culture : 1800-present
- Having it both ways : self-subversion in western popular classics
- Heart in conflict : Faulkner's struggles with vocation
- Hegel and Shakespeare on moral imagination
- Hemingway : life into art
- Henry James and the darkest abyss of romance
- Henry James and the father question
- Henry James, Gertrude Stein, and the biographical act
- Henry Miller and narrative form : constructing the self, rejecting modernity
- Hero-ego in search of self : a Jungian reading of Beowulf
- Herself beheld : the literature of the looking glass
- Hopkins' achieved self
- Horace : behind the public poetry
- I do, I undo, I redo : the textual genesis of modernist selves in Hopkins, Yeats, Conrad, Forster, Joyce, and Woolf
- I/you : paradoxical constructions of self and other in early German romanticism
- Identity and form in contemporary literature
- Imagining a self : autobiography and novel in eighteenth-century England
- Imagining monsters : miscreations of the self in eighteenth-century England
- Imagining selves : essays in honor of Patricia Meyer Spacks
- Imagining the self, constructing the past : selected proceedings from the 36th Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum
- Imitation et rénaissance dans la poésie de Ronsard
- Impersonality : seven essays
- Impossible individuality : Romanticism, revolution, and the origins of modern selfhood, 1787-1802
- Impressionist subjects : gender, interiority, and modernist fiction in England
- Impure thoughts : sexuality, Catholicism and literature in twentieth-century Ireland
- In and out of the mind : Greek images of the tragic self
- In respect to egotism : studies in American Romantic writing
- In the presence of audience : the self in diaries and fiction
- Interior states : institutional consciousness and the inner life of democracy in the antebellum United States
- Interview with a ghost : essays
- Intimacy and sexuality in the age of Shakespeare
- Intimate and authentic economies : the American self-made man from Douglass to Chaplin
- Introspection and contemporary poetry
- Isherwood's fiction : the self and technique
- Jack Kerouac's Duluoz legend : the mythic form of an autobiographical fiction
- James Agee and the legend of himself : a critical study
- James Joyce and the politics of egoism
- Jean Paul lesen : Versuch über seine poetische Anthropologie des Ich
- Jean Rhys and the novel as women's text
- Jean Rhys's historical imagination : reading and writing the Creole
- John Milton : the self and the world
- Joyce's messianism : Dante, negative existence, and the messianic self
- Knowing one's place in contemporary Irish and Polish poetry : Zagajewski, Mahon, Heaney, Hartwig
- L'autre moi : fantasmes et fantastique dans les nouvelles de Mérimée
- L'écriture de soi à Rome : autour de la correspondance de Cicéron
- L'écrivain à la dérobée : l'auteur dans le roman à la première personne (1721-1782)
- La memoria sublevada : autobiografía y reivindicación del intelectual ibérico del medio siglo
- La mémoire créatrice : essai sur l'écriture de soi au XVIIIe siècle
- La subjectivité littéraire autour du siècle de saint Louis
- Language and the self in D.H. Lawrence
- Las románticas : women writers and subjectivity in Spain, 1835-1850
- Lavish self-divisions : the novels of Joyce Carol Oates
- Le moi et ses modèles : genèse et transtextualités
- Lebenstexte : literarische Selbststilisierung englischer Frauen in der frühen Neuzeit
- Led by language : the poetry and poetics of Susan Howe
- Like hot knives to the brain : James Ellroy's search for himself
- Linking the Americas : race, hybrid discourses, and the reformulation of feminine identity
- Literary liaisons : auto/biographical appropriations in modernist women's fiction
- Literary self-fashioning in Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz
- Literary selves : autobiography and contemporary American nonfiction
- Locating exiled writers in contemporary Russian literature : exiles at home
- Locating the Romantic subject : Novalis with Winnicott
- Lost in the customhouse : authorship in the American renaissance
- Love words : the self and the text in medieval and renaissance poetry
- Making a new man : Ciceronian self-fashioning in the rhetorical works
- Making homes in the West/Indies : constructions of subjectivity in the writings of Michelle Cliff and Jamaica Kincaid
- Making men : sophists and self-presentation in ancient Rome
- Male call : becoming Jack London
- Male subjectivity and poetic form in "new American" poetry
- Mapping the contours of oppression : subjectivity, truth and fiction in recent German autobiographical treatments of totalitarianism
- Mark Twain and William James : crafting a free self
- Mark Twain on the loose : a comic writer and the American self
- Marketing the author : authorial personae, narrative selves and self-fashioning, 1880-1930
- Mary Wollstonecraft and the accent of the feminine
- Masks outrageous and austere : culture, psyche, and persona in modern women poets
- Max Beerbohm and the act of writing
- Medieval narrative and modern narratology : subjects and objects of desire
- Mediterranean travels : writing self and other from the ancient world to contemporary society
- Medusa's mirrors : Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and the metamorphosis of the female self
- Melancholy, love, and time : boundaries of the self in ancient literature
- Membranes : metaphors of invasion in nineteenth-century literature, science, and politics
- Memory and writing : from Wordsworth to Lawrence
- Men and women writers of the 1930s : the dangerous flood of history
- Michel Leiris : writing the self
- Milton's peculiar grace : self-representation and authority
- Miracles of rare device ; : the poet's sense of self in nineteenth-century poetry
- Miroirs d'encre : rhétorique de l'autoportrait
- Modern selves : essays on modern British and American autobiography
- Modernism's body : sex, culture, and Joyce
- Modernism, labour, and selfhood in British literature and culture, 1890-1930
- Moi aussi
- Montaigne and brief narrative form : shaping the essay
- Montaigne and the life of freedom
- Monumental anxieties : homoerotic desire and feminine influence in 19th-century U.S. literature
- Moralized song : the character of Augustan lyricism
- Moy qui me voy : the writer and the self from Montaigne to Leiris
- Multiculturalism, multilingualism and the self : literature and culture studies
- My Petersburg/myself : mental architecture and imaginative space in modern Russian letters
- Nabokov's early fiction : patterns of self and other
- Narcissism and the text : studies in literature and the psychology of self
- Narcissism, the family, and madness : a self-psychological study of Eugene O'Neill and his plays
- Narcissus from rubble : competing models of character in contemporary British and American fiction
- Narcissus sous rature : male subjectivity in contemporary American poetry
- Narcissus transformed : the textual subject in psychoanalysis and literature
- Narrating the American West : new forms of historical memory
- Narrating the American West : new forms of historical memory
- Narrative structures and the language of the self
- Naturally woman : the search for self in Black Canadian women's literature
- Never say I : sexuality and the first person in Colette, Gide, and Proust
- No mysteries out of ourselves : identity and textual form in the novels of Herman Melville
- Nobody's home : speech, self, and place in American fiction from Hawthorne to DeLillo
- Novelists in their youth
- On not being someone else : tales of our unled lives
- One kind of everything : poem and person in contemporary America
- Opacity and the closet : queer tactics in Foucault, Barthes, and Warhol
- Orienting the self : the German literary encounter with the Eastern other
- Out of the shadow : ecopsychology, story, and encounters with the land
- Outside the arch : Kohut and five modern writers
- Ovid and the politics of emotion in Elizabethan England
- Painterly abstraction in modernist American poetry : the contemporaneity of modernism
- Passionate doubts : designs of interpretation in contemporary American fiction
- Pastoral and the poetics of self-contradiction : Theocritus to Marvell
- Performing the Victorian : John Ruskin and identity in theater, science, and education
- Persona and decorum in Milton's prose
- Persona and humor in Mark Twain's early writings
- Personality in Greek epic, tragedy, and philosophy : the self in dialogue
- Petrarch's humanism and the care of the self
- Philip Larkin : the poet's plight
- Pilgrim Chaucer : center stage
- Pilgrimage of Dorothy Richardson
- Poetic relations : intimacy and faith in the English Reformation
- Poetics in the poem : critical essays on American self-reflexive poetry
- Poetics of self and form in Keats and Shelley : Nietzschean subjectivity and genre
- Poetics of the literary self-portrait
- Political initiation in the novels of Philip Roth
- Possibilities of hidden things : narrative transgression in Victorian fictional autobiography
- Postcolonial life-writing : culture, politics and self-representation
- Preserving the self in the south seas, 1680-1840
- Privacy : concealing the eighteenth-century self
- Privacy and print : reading and writing in seventeenth-century England
- Private poets, worldly acts : public and private history in contemporary American poetry
- Problem novels : Victorian fiction theorizes the sensational self
- Proletarian imagination : self, modernity, and the sacred in Russia, 1910-1925
- Proustian passions : the uses of self-justification for A la recherche du temps perdu
- Psychosocial spaces : verbal and visual readings of British culture, 1750-1820
- Pursuing privacy in Cold War America
- Queer events : post-deconstructive subjectivities in Spanish writing and film, 1960s to 1990s
- Rainer Maria Rilke : autobiography, fiction, and therapy
- Reading contemporary African American drama : fragments of history, fragments of self
- Reading the book of himself : narrative strategies in the works of James Joyce
- Real phonies : cultures of authenticity in post-World War II America
- Realms of the self : variations on a theme in modern drama
- Recovering your story : Proust, Joyce, Woolf, Faulkner, Morrison
- Reflections of Romanity : discourses of subjectivity in Imperial Rome
- Regard for the other : autothanatography in Rousseau, De Quincey, Baudelaire, and Wilde
- Reinaldo Arenas, Caliban, and postcolonial discourse
- Reinaldo Arenas, Caliban, and postcolonial discourse
- Relating narratives : storytelling and selfhood
- Renaissance self-fashioning : from More to Shakespeare
- Revised lives : Walt Whitman and nineteenth-century authorship
- Rimbaud's theatre of the self
- Robert Frost : modern poetics and the landscapes of self
- Robert Frost among his poems : a literary companion to the poet's own biographical contexts and associations
- Robert Louis Stevenson and Joseph Conrad : writers of transition
- Robert Lowell and Life studies : revising the self
- Robert Lowell's language of the self
- Romantic identities : varieties of subjectivity, 1774-1830
- Romantic migrations : local, national, and transnational dispositions
- Romantic theatricality : gender, poetry, and spectatorship
- Romantic voices : identity and ideology in British poetry, 1789-1850
- Rosario Ferré : a search for identity
- Rousseau and romantic autobiography
- Salvage work : U.S. and Caribbean literatures amid the debris of legal personhood
- Samuel Beckett's self-referential drama : the three I's
- Saying I no more : subjectivity and consciousness in the prose of Samuel Beckett
- Saying yes at lightning : threat and the provisional image in post-romantic poetry
- Seas and inland journeys : landscape and consciousness from Wordsworth to Roethke
- Sedaris
- Seeing Chekhov : life and art
- Seizures of the will in early modern English drama
- Self and Space in the Theater of Susan Glaspell
- Self and community in the fiction of Elizabeth Spencer
- Self and existence : J.M.R. Lenz's subjective point of view
- Self and image in Juan Ramón Jiménez : modern and post-modern readings
- Self as narrative : subjectivity and community in contemporary fiction
- Self, nation, text in Salman Rushdie's Midnight's children
- Self-consciousness in modern british fiction
- Self-discovery and authority in Afro-American narrative
- Self-expression in early Greek lyric : elegiac and iambic poetry
- Self-referentiality in 20th century British and American poetry
- Self-speaking in medieval and early modern English drama : subjectivity, discourse, and the stage
- Selfhood and redemption in Blake's Songs
- Seven metaphysical poets : a structural study of the unchanging self
- Sex, lies, and autobiography : the ethics of confession
- Sexuality and the sense of self in the works of Georg Trakl and Robert Musil
- Shakespeare's Hamlet and the controversies of self
- Shakespeare's extremes : wild man, monster, beast
- Shakespeare's legal ecologies : law and distributed selfhood
- Shakespeare's sonnets; self, love and art
- Shelley's poetry : the divided self
- Shifting subjects : plural subjectivity in contemporary francophone women's autobiography
- Sincerity's shadow : self-consciousness in British Romantic and mid-twentieth-century American poetry
- Sinful self, saintly self : the Puritan experience of poetry
- Sixteenth-century identities
- Skeptical selves : empiricism and modernity in the French novel
- Slippery characters : ethnic impersonators and American identities
- Solitude and society in the works of Herman Melville and Edith Wharton
- Solitude versus solidarity in the novels of Joseph Conrad : political and epistemological implications of narrative innovation
- Space and self in early modern European cultures
- Spatial politics in the postcolonial novel
- Speaking the other self : American women writers
- Spenser's life and the subject of biography
- Squaring the circle : Esther Tusquets' novelistic tetralogy : (a Jungian analysis)
- Stages of self : the dramatic monologues of Laforgue, Valéry & Mallarmé
- Stendhal autobiographe
- Storyteller : the authorized biography of Roald Dahl
- Subject to change : the lessons of Latin American women's testimonio for truth, fiction, and theory
- Subjectivities : a history of self-representation in Britain, 1832-1920
- Subjectivity
- Subjectivity and the signs of love : discourse, desire, and the emergence of modernity in Honoré d'Urfé's L'Astrée
- Subjects of terror : Nerval, Hegel, and the modern self
- Sylvia Plath : confessing the fictive self
- Technology and identity in young adult fiction : the posthuman subject
- Telling border life stories : four Mexican American women writers
- Teresa of Avila's autobiography : authority, power and the self in mid-sixteenth-century Spain
- Texts and the self in the twelfth century
- The "inward" language : sonnets of Wyatt, Sidney, Shakespeare, Donne
- The African diaspora & autobiographics : skeins of self and skin
- The American counterfeit : authenticity and identity in American literature and culture
- The American quest for a supreme fiction : Whitman's legacy in the personal epic
- The French new autobiographies : Sarraute, Duras, and Robbe-Grillet
- The Hispanic homograph : gay self-representation in contemporary Spanish autobiography
- The Play of the self
- The Poetics of reading
- The Victorian self : autobiography and Biblical narrative
- The art of Frank Norris, storyteller
- The art of Frank Norris, storyteller
- The author as hero : self and tradition in Bulgakov, Pasternak, and Nabokov
- The autobiographical myth of Robert Lowell
- The autobiographical subject : gender and ideology in eighteenth-century England
- The autonomy of the self from Richardson to Huysmans
- The body of poetry : essays on women, form, and the poetic self
- The central self : a study in Romantic and Victorian imagination
- The circular pilgrimage : an anatomy of the confessional autobiography in Spain
- The commonwealth of wit : the writer's image and his strategies of self-representation in Elizabethan literature
- The contemporary Anglophone travel novel : the aesthetics of self-fashioning in the era of globalization
- The dark Enlightenment : Jung, Romanticism, and the repressed other
- The death-ego and the vital self : romances of desire in literature and psychoanalysis
- The dialectic of self and story : reading and storytelling in contemporary American fiction
- The dialectic of selfhood in Montaigne
- The dialogic self : reconstructing subjectivity in Woolf, Lessing, and Atwood
- The diasporan self : unbreaking the circle in western Black novels
- The diminished self : Orwell and the loss of freedom
- The discourse of self in Victorian poetry
- The disenchanted self : representing the subject in the Canterbury tales
- The disenchanted self : representing the subject in the Canterbury tales
- The dissolution of character in late romanticism, 1820-1839
- The eloquent "I" ; : style and self in seventeenth-century prose
- The elusive self : archetypal approaches to the novels of Miguel de Unamuno
- The elusive self : psyche and spirit in Virginia Woolf's novels
- The elusive self in the poetry of Robert Browning
- The empathic reader : a study of the narcissistic character and the drama of the self
- The ethics of autobiography : replacing the subject in modern Spain
- The ethics of intensity in American fiction
- The evolving self in the novels of Gail Godwin
- The experimental self : dialogic subjectivity in Woolf, Pym, and Brooke-Rose
- The face in the mirror : Hemingway's writers
- The fate of the self : German writers and the French theory
- The feeling of being : sensibility in postwar American fiction
- The female body : perspectives of Latin American artists
- The fiction of relationship
- The fragmented female body and identity : the postmodern, feminist, and multiethnic writings of Toni Morrison, Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Phyllis Alesia Perry, Gayl Jones, Emma Pérez, Paula Gunn Allen, and Kathy Acker
- The given and the made : strategies of poetic redefinition
- The haptic Aesthetic in Samuel Beckett's drama
- The higher self in Christopher Brennan's Poems : esotericism, romanticism, symbolism
- The imaginary puritan : literature, intellectual labor, and the origins of personal life
- The imaginary puritan : literature, intellectual labor, and the origins of personal life
- The imperfect friend : emotion and rhetoric in Sidney, Milton, and their contexts
- The improbability of Othello : rhetorical anthropology and shakespearean selfhood
- The intercontextuality of self and nature in Ludwig Tieck's early works
- The interpersonal idiom in Shakespeare, Donne, and early modern culture
- The intimate empire : reading women's autobiography
- The invention of literary subjectivity
- The invention of the self : the hinge of consciousness in the eighteenth century
- The irony of identity : self and imagination in the drama of Christopher Marlowe
- The land of lost content : children and childhood in nineteenth-century French literature
- The law of the heart : individualism and the modern self in American literature
- The life and undeath of autonomy in American literature
- The long encounter ; : self and experience in the writings of Herman Melville
- The ludic self in seventeenth-century English literature
- The making of Sir Philip Sidney
- The mind of the novel : reflexive fiction and the ineffable
- The modernist self in twentieth-century English literature : a study in self-fragmentation
- The monstered self : narratives of death and performance in Latin American fiction
- The negotiated self : the dynamics of identity in francophone Caribbean narrative
- The old formalism : character in contemporary American poetry
- The other self : selfhood and society in modern Greek fiction
- The poetic self : towards a phenomenology of romanticism
- The poetics of impersonality : T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound
- The poison at the source : the female novel of self-development in the early twentieth century
- The politics and poetics of contemporary English tragedy
- The politics of anxiety in nineteenth-century American literature
- The properties of Othello
- The protean self: dramatic action in contemporary fiction
- The representation of the self in the American Renaissance
- The revolutionary "I" : Wordsworth and the politics of self-presentation
- The rhetoric of self in Robert Bly and Adrienne Rich : doubling and the holotropic urge
- The romance of desire : Emerson's commitment to incompletion
- The romantic subject in autobiography : Rousseau and Goethe
- The search for selfhood in modern literature
- The self and it : novel objects in eighteenth-century England
- The self as mind : vision and identity in Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Keats
- The self as muse : narcissism and creativity in the German imagination, 1750-1830
- The self in early modern literature : for the common good
- The self in the cell : narrating the Victorian prisoner
- The self of the city : Macedonio Fernández, the Argentine Avant-Garde, and modernity in Buenos Aires
- The self-fashioning of Disraeli, 1818-1851
- The senses of humor : self and laughter in modern America
- The shattering of the self : violence, subjectivity, and early modern texts
- The social self : Hawthorne, Howells, William James, and nineteenth-century psychology
- The still performance : writing, self, and interconnection in five postmodern American poets
- The story of "me" : contemporary American autofiction
- The story of all things : writing the self in English Renaissance narrative poetry
- The stranger within thee" : concepts of the self in late-eighteenth-century literature
- The tears of Narcissus : melancholia and masculinity in early modern writing
- The tenth muse : the psyche of the American poet
- The text is myself : women's life writing and catastrophe
- The turning key : autobiography and the subjective impulse since 1800
- The unforeseen self in the works of Wendell Berry
- The unsociable sociability of women's lifewriting
- The view from the masthead : maritime imagination and antebellum American sea narratives
- The watchman in pieces : surveillance, literature, and liberal personhood
- The woman who pretended to be who she was : myths of self-imitation
- The work of self-representation : lyric poetry in colonial New England
- The wounded surgeon : confession and transformation in six American poets : Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, John Berryman, Randall Jarrell, Delmore Schwartz, Sylvia Plath
- The writer's experience : essays on self and circumstance in the Hispanic literatures
- The writings of William Carlos Williams : publicity for the self
- Theater and integrity : emptying selves in drama, ethics, and religion
- This stubborn self : Texas autobiographies
- Thomas Hardy and desire : conceptions of the self
- Thomas Hardy, femininity and dissent : reassessing the 'minor' novels
- Tibull und Messalla : eine Untersuchung zum Selbstverständnis des Dichters Tibull
- Towards reading Freud : self-creation in Milton, Wordsworth, Emerson, and Sigmund Freud
- Tracking Thoreau : double-crossing nature and technology
- Transformative learning through creative life writing : exploring the self in the learning process
- Transformative learning through creative life writing : exploring the self in the learning process
- Travel writing : the self and the world
- Tudor autobiography : listening for inwardness
- Twain and Freud on the human race : parallels on personality, politics and religion
- Twentieth century poetry : selves and situations
- Unbearable heartbeat : reading ethics and politics in Derrida, Levinas, and Kundera
- Universes without us : posthuman cosmologies in American literature
- Unstuck in time : a journey through Kurt Vonnegut's life and novels
- Vanishing : Shakespeare, the subject, and early modern culture
- Vergil's Aeneid and the Roman self : subject and nation in literary discourse
- Versions of the self ; : studies in English autobiography from John Bunyan to John Stuart Mill
- Violation and repair in the English novel : the paradigm of experience from Richardson to Woolf
- Virginia Woolf : an inner life
- Visions of the self in the novels of Camilo Castelo Branco (1850-1870)
- Voices of the fugitives : runaway slave stories and their fictions of self-creation
- Voies vers l'autre : Dupin, Bonnefoy, Noël, Guillevic
- Von Namen und Dingen : Erkundungen zur Rolle des Ich in der Literatur am Beispiel von Ingeborg Bachmann, Peter Bichsel, Max Frisch, Gottfried Keller, Heinrich von Kleist, Arthur Schnitzler, Frank Wedekind, Vladimir Nabokov und W.G. Sebald
- Wallace Stevens : a mythology of self
- Walt Whitman : the poem as private history
- Weakness : a literary and philosophical history
- What I cannot say : self, word, and world in Whitman, Stevens, and Merwin
- Whitman possessed : poetry, sexuality, and popular authority
- Who lived at Alfoxton? : Virginia Woolf and English Romanticism
- Who's writing this? : fifty-five writers on humor, courage, self-loathing, and the creative process
- William Blake on self and soul
- William Morris : the construction of a male self, 1856-1872
- Women and poetry : truth, autobiography, and the shape of the self
- Women reading women writing : self-invention in Paula Gunn Allen, Gloria Anzaldúa, and Audre Lorde
- Women taking risks in contemporary autobiographical narratives
- Word outward : medieval perspectives on the entry into language
- Wordsworth : an inner life
- Wordsworth and feeling : the poetry of an adult child
- Wordsworth and the beginnings of modern poetry
- Wordsworth in his major lyrics : the art and psychology of self-representation
- Writing combat and the self in early modern English literature : the pen and the sword
- Writing down Rome : satire, comedy, and other offences in Latin poetry
- Writing performances : the stages of Dorothy L. Sayers
- Writing selves : contemporary feminist autography
- Writing the self : diaries, memoirs, and the history of the self
- Writing the self, writing the nation : romantic selfhood in the works of Germaine de Staël and Claire de Duras
- Written work : Langland, labor, and authorship
- Yeats & American poetry : the tradition of the self
- Yeats & the poetry of death : elegy, self-elegy, and the sublime
- Über die Schwierigkeiten, (s)ich zu sagen : Horizonte literarischer Subjektkonstitution
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<div class="citation" vocab="http://schema.org/"><i class="fa fa-external-link-square fa-fw"></i> Data from <span resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/9hi7I-LaAEI/" typeof="CategoryCode http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/Concept"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/resource/9hi7I-LaAEI/">Self in literature</a></span> - <span property="potentialAction" typeOf="OrganizeAction"><span property="agent" typeof="LibrarySystem http://library.link/vocab/LibrarySystem" resource="http://link.library.missouri.edu/"><span property="name http://bibfra.me/vocab/lite/label"><a property="url" href="http://link.library.missouri.edu/">University of Missouri Libraries</a></span></span></span></span></div>