Group by:
Author |
Year of AwardNumber of items at this level: 26.
2012
Hill, David Arthur (2012) A distrust of tradition: the study, performance and reception of Shakespeare in England in a context of social, political and technological change, 1919-1939. M.Litt thesis, University of Birmingham.
Nagase, Mariko (2012) Literary editing of seventeenth-century English drama. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Parker, Sarah Louise (2012) The lesbian muse: homoeroticism, female poetic identity and contemporary muse figures. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Reeve-Tucker, Alice Glen (2012) Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, and Catholicism: 1928-1939. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Schnabel, Stephanie Michaela (2012) Narrative strategies in Shakespearean productions on twenty-first-century European stages. M.Litt. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Toney, Polly (2012) Elizabeth Cook’s Achilles: women’s writing of classical reception and feminism. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
2011
Birch, Catherine Elizabeth (2011) Evolutionary feminism in late-victorian women’s poetry: Mathilde Blind, Constance Naden and May Kendall. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Emmett, Rebecca Jane (2011) Anglo-Scottish succession tracts during the late Elizabethan period, 1595-1603. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Ingham, Anthea Margaret (2011) Algernon Charles Swinburne: the causes and effects of his Sapphic possession. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Lachmansingh, Sandhya Kimberley (2011) ‘Fashions of the mind’: Modernism and British vogue under the editorship of Dorothy Todd. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Linnemann, Emily Caroline Louise (2011) The cultural value of Shakespeare in twenty-first-century publicly-funded theatre in England. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
O'Mara, Timothy John (2011) An edition of the Middle English Pains of Sin from Cambridge, Magdelene College Library, Ms Pepys 2498. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Olive, Sarah Elizabeth (2011) Shakespeare valued: policy, pedagogy and practice in English education, 1989-2009. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Roberts, Marion (2011) Close encounters: Anna Seward, 1742–1809, a woman in provincial cultural life. M.Litt. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Rogers, Jami (2011) Shakespeare and the thirties: representations of the past in contemporary performance. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Tanswell, Grace (2011) A documentation and critical reflection of my original script, “With New Eyes”, from original concept to its submitted form. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
2010
McDonald, Anmarie (2010) She is Rhodesia. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
2009
Sato, Kanshi Hiroko (2009) Masochism and Decadent literature: Jean Lorrain and Joséphin Péladan. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
2006
Mihara, Minoru (2006) The origin and the development of scholarly editing: a comparative study of ballad editing and Shakespeare editing in the eighteenth century. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
1999
Pracy, Elizabeth Patricia (1999) An analysis of a notebook of James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Yin, Winifred Wei-fang (1999) Beyond the point of childishness. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
1996
Walker, Judith Elaine (1996) 'Torment to a restlesse mind': an analysis of major themes in Poems and Fancies (1653) by Margaret Cavendish. M.Phil. thesis, University of Birmingham.
1972
Donovan, John (1972) Hudibras and its literary context. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
Wilcher, Robert (1972) The use of natural details in English poetry: 1645-1668. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
1967
Wilcher, Robert (1967) Natural details in the poetry of Andrew Marvell. M.A. thesis, University of Birmingham.
1961
Southall, R. (1961) The nature and significance of rhythm in the poetry of Sir Thomas Wyatt: (with transcripts of two principal manuscripts). Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham.
This list was generated on Thu May 23 03:46:10 2013 IST.