English fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism
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The concept English fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Colby College Libraries.
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English fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism
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The concept English fiction -- 20th century -- History and criticism represents the subject, aboutness, idea or notion of resources found in Colby College Libraries.
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- "Blighted beginnings" : coming of age in independent Ireland
- A concise companion to contemporary British fiction
- A literature of their own : British women novelists from Brontë to Lessing
- A modernist fantasy : modernism, anarchism, & the radical fantastic
- A readers guide to great twentieth-century English novels
- A route to modernism : Hardy, Lawrence, Woolf
- African identities : race, nation and culture in ethnography, pan-Africanism, and Black literatures
- After Empire : Scott, Naipaul, Rushdie
- An across walls overview-study of novels and short stories by eighteen 20th century English and American authors
- Anglican women novelists : Charlotte Brontë to P.D. James
- Anxieties of Empire and the fiction of intrigue
- Ashes taken for fire : aesthetic modernism and the critique of identity
- Banned in Ireland : censorship and the Irish writer
- Baptism of fire : the birth of the modern British fantastic in World War I
- Barry Hines : Kes, Threads and beyond
- Bergson and the stream of consciousness novel
- Beyond egotism : the fiction of James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and D.H. Lawrence
- Bloomsbury aesthetics and the novels of Forster and Woolf
- Bloomsbury, Modernism, and the Reinvention of Intimacy
- Books for pleasure: : popular fiction, 1914-1945
- Bordering on the body : the racial matrix of modern fiction and culture
- Brainwashing : the fictions of mind control : a study of novels and films since World War II
- British Asian fiction : framing the contemporary
- British fiction after modernism : the novel at mid-century
- British fiction and cross-cultural encounters : ethnographic modernism from Wells to Woolf
- British fiction in the 1930s : the dispiriting decade
- British fictions of the sixties : the making of the swinging decade
- British terrorist novels of the 1970s
- Catholic emancipations : Irish fiction from Thomas Moore to James Joyce
- Catholic fiction and social reality in Ireland, 1873-1922
- Changing Ireland : strategies in contemporary women's fiction
- Changing the story : feminist fiction and the tradition
- Cities of affluence and anger : a literary geography of modern Englishness
- City codes : reading the modern urban novel
- Colonial odysseys : empire and epic in the modernist novel
- Colonial strangers : women writing the end of the British empire
- Colonialism and the emergence of science fiction
- Color, space, and creativity : art and ontology in five British writers
- Consciousness & the novel : connected essays
- Contemporary British & Irish fiction : an introduction through interviews
- Contemporary British fiction
- Contemporary British fiction and the artistry of space : style, landscape, perception
- Contemporary Irish fiction : themes, tropes, theories
- Contemporary feminist historical crime fiction
- Contemporary fiction and the ethics of modern culture
- Contemporary fiction and the uses of theory : the novel from structuralism to postmodernism
- Contemporary masculinities in fiction, film and television
- Contemporary novelists : British fiction since 1970
- Contemporary women novelists : a collection of critical essays
- Cosmopolitan style : modernism beyond the nation
- Cover stories : narrative and ideology in the British spy thriller
- Covert relations : James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Henry James
- Crime writing in interwar Britain : fact and fiction in the Golden Age
- Critical identities in contemporary Anglophone diasporic literature
- Dark humor and social satire in the modern British novel
- Decolonization agonistics in postcolonial fiction
- Degeneration, culture, and the novel, 1880-1940
- Double visions : women and men in modern and contemporary Irish fiction
- Dress and identity in British literary culture, 1870-1914
- Edwardian and Georgian fiction, 1880 to 1914
- England through colonial eyes in twentieth-century fiction
- English fiction of the early modern period 1890-1940
- English fiction since 1984 : narrating a nation
- Erotic faith : being in love from Jane Austen to D.H. Lawrence
- Ethics and nostalgia in the contemporary novel
- Expert modernists, matricide, and modern culture : Woolf, Forster, Joyce
- Exploring teachers in fiction and film : saviors, scapegoats and schoolmarms
- Father and son : Kingsley Amis, Martin Amis, and the British novel since 1950
- Femicidal fears : narratives of the female gothic experience
- Feminism, Bakhtin, and the dialogic
- Fiction of the First World War : a study
- Fictions of India : narrative and power
- Fictions of the Irish literary revival : a changeling art
- Figuring the woman author in contemporary fiction
- Flights from realism : themes and strategies in postmodernist British and American fiction
- Food, consumption, and the body in contemporary women's fiction
- Front lines of modernism : remapping the Great War in British fiction
- Gangsters or guerrillas? : representations of Irish Republicans in 'troubles fiction'
- Gothic Invasions : imperialism, war and fin-de-siècle popular fiction
- Gothic fiction and the writing of trauma, 1914 -1934 : the ghosts of World War One
- Hardy's influence on the modern novel
- Hearts of darkness : white women write race
- Heralds of the postmodern : madness and fiction in Conrad, Woolf, and Lessing
- History and cultural memory in neo-Victorian fiction : Victorian afterimages
- Hopes and impediments : selected essays, 1965-1987
- Humor in contemporary junior literature
- Imagination and the contemporary novel
- Imagining India
- Imagining London : postcolonial fiction and the transnational metropolis
- Impressionist subjects : gender, interiority, and modernist fiction in England
- In praise of new travelers : reading Caribbean migrant women writers
- Indirections of the novel : James, Conrad, and Forster
- Insistence of the material : literature in the age of biopolitics
- Institutional character : collectivity, individuality, and the modernist novel
- Intimate violence : reading rape and torture in twentieth-century fiction
- Intrigue : espionage and culture
- Irish novels, 1890-1940 : new bearings in culture and fiction
- Knowledge and experimental realism in Conrad, Lawrence, and Woolf
- Late modernism : politics, fiction, and the arts between the world wars
- Le roman anglais de notre temps
- Lesbian empire : radical crosswriting in the Twenties
- Lesbian gothic : transgressive fictions
- Literary Darwinism : evolution, human nature, and literature
- Literary impressionism and modernist aesthetics
- Lost gay novels : a reference guide to fifty works from the first half of the twentieth century
- Male masochism : modern revisions of the story of love
- Masculinity in male-authored fiction 1950-2000 : keeping it up
- Misfit modernism : queer forms of double exile in the twentieth-century novel
- Modern fiction and the art of subversion
- Modern utopian fictions from H.G. Wells to Iris Murdoch
- Modernism
- Modernism and the architecture of private life
- Modernism and the rhythms of sympathy : Vernon Lee, Virginia Woolf, D.H. Lawrence
- Modernism, history and the First World War
- Modernism, media, and propaganda : British narrative from 1900 to 1945
- Modernism, narrative, and humanism
- Mother without child : contemporary fiction and the crisis of motherhood
- Murder by the book? : feminism and the crime novel
- Museum trouble : Edwardian fiction and the emergence of modernism
- Music in contemporary British fiction : listening to the novel
- Mystery in children's literature : from the rational to the supernatural
- Mysticism and the mid-century novel
- Myth and fairy tale in contemporary women's fiction
- Narratives of class in new Irish and Scottish literature : from Joyce to Kelman, Doyle, Galloway, and McNamee
- Narratives of memory : British writing of the 1940s
- Neil Gaiman
- New woman strategies : Sarah Grand, Olive Schreiner, Mona Caird
- On modern British fiction
- Parallel visions, confluent worlds : five comparative postcolonial studies of Caribbean and Irish novels in English, 1925-1965
- Passions of the voice : hysteria, narrative, and the figure of the speaking woman, 1850-1915
- Peripheral visions : images of nationhood in contemporary British fiction
- Place and space in modern fiction
- Play and the politics of reading : the social uses of modernist form
- Political and social issues in British women's fiction, 1928-1968
- Postcolonial literary history and Indian English fiction
- Prose writers of World War I
- Race and the modernist imagination
- Random destinations : escaping the Holocaust and starting life anew
- Reading behind the lines : postmemory in contemporary British war fiction
- Reading the modern British and Irish novel, 1890-1930
- Reading the novel in English, 1950-2000
- Refiguring modernism
- Regenerative fictions : postcolonialism, psychoanalysis, and the nation as family
- Retrospective Raj : medicine, literature and history after empire
- Rewriting the women of Camelot : Arthurian popular fiction and feminism
- Rich and strange : gender, history, modernism
- Ritual unbound : reading sacrifice in modernist fiction
- Romances of the archive in contemporary British fiction
- Sapphic primitivism : productions of race, class, and sexuality in key works of modern fiction
- Scandalous fictions : the twentieth-century novel in the public sphere
- Secret agents in fiction : Ian Fleming, John le Carré, and Len Deighton
- Seeing double : revisioning Edwardian and modernist literature
- Seeming human : artificial intelligence and Victorian realist character
- Self & form in modern narrative
- Shadows of imagination; : the fantasies of C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Charles Williams
- Shell shock and the modernist imagination : the death drive in post-World War I British fiction
- Sherlock Holmes was wrong : reopening the case of the Hound of the Baskervilles
- The Cambridge companion to the modernist novel
- The Cambridge companion to the twentieth-century English novel
- The Cambridge introduction to modern British fiction, 1950-2000
- The Caribbean novel in English : an introduction
- The English novel from Dickens to Lawrence
- The English novel in history, 1895-1920
- The Great War and postmodern memory : the First World War in late 20th-century British fiction (1985-2000)
- The Irish novel at the end of the twentieth century : gender, bodies, and power
- The Irish novel, 1800-1910
- The Irish novel, 1960-2010
- The Victorian novel of adulthood : plot and purgatory in fictions of maturity
- The Victorian woman question in contemporary feminist fiction
- The appropriated voice : narrative authority in Conrad, Forster, and Woolf
- The autobiographical novel of co-consciousness : Goncharov, Woolf, and Joyce
- The colonial encounter : a reading of six novels
- The contemporary British novel
- The contemporary British novel
- The contemporary British novel since 1980
- The contemporary Irish novel : critical readings
- The fictions of James Joyce and Wyndham Lewis : monsters of nature and design
- The flower of battle : British fiction writers of the First World War
- The free spirit, a study of liberal humanism in the novels of George Eliot, Henry James, E.M. Forster, Virginia Woolf [and] Angus Wilson
- The great war of words : British, American, and Canadian propaganda and fiction, 1914-1933
- The hero's tale : narrators in the early modern novel
- The historical romance, 1890-1990
- The labors of modernism : domesticity, servants, and authorship in modernist fiction
- The late modernist novel : a critique of global narrative reason
- The literature of war : five studies in heroic virtue
- The marriage paradox : modernist novels and the cultural imperative to marry
- The modern British novel
- The modern British novel of the left : a research guide
- The modern novel : a short introduction
- The modernist novel and the decline of empire
- The modernist short story : a study in theory and practice
- The nightmare of history : the fictions of Virginia Woolf and D.H. Lawrence
- The novel and the menagerie : totality, Englishness, and empire
- The novel and the modern world
- The novel in Africa and the Caribbean since 1950
- The novel in England, 1900-1950 : history and theory
- The novel in South and South East Asia since 1945
- The novel now : contemporary British fiction
- The pictorial in modernist fiction from Stephen Crane to Ernest Hemingway
- The politics of narration : James Joyce, William Faulkner, and Virginia Woolf
- The postcolonial exotic : marketing the margins
- The postmodern short story : forms and issues
- The regional novel in Britain and Ireland, 1800-1990
- The reinvention of the British and Irish novel, 1880-1940
- The rural tradition in the English novel, 1900-1939
- The self-conscious novel : artifice in fiction from Joyce to Pynchon
- The short story and the First World War
- The sky of our manufacture : the London fog and British fiction from Dickens to Woolf
- The span of mainstream and science fiction : a critical study of a new literary genre
- The spy story
- The subject of modernism : narrative alterations in the fiction of Eliot, Conrad, Woolf, and Joyce
- The things that matter : what seven classic novels have to say about the stages of life
- The vanishing hero; : studies in novelists of the twenties
- The visual arts, pictorialism, and the novel : James, Lawrence, and Woolf
- The withered branch; : six studies in the modern novel
- The world broke in two : Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot, D. H. Lawrence, E. M. Forster and the year that changed literature
- Theorists of the modernist novel : James Joyce, Dorothy Richardson, Virginia Woolf
- Trauma and history in the Irish novel : the return of the dead
- Twentieth-century crime fiction
- Twentieth-century epic novels
- Twentieth-century fiction by Irish women : nation and gender
- Unexpected pleasures : parody, queerness & genre in 20th-century British fiction
- Unseasonable youth : modernism, colonialism, and the fiction of development
- Urban gothic of the Second World War : dark London
- Victims and the postmodern narrative, or, doing violence to the body : an ethic of reading and writing
- Violence and modernism : Ibsen, Joyce, and Woolf
- Weird English
- Womanist and feminist aesthetics : a comparative review
- Women writing modern fiction : a passion for ideas
- Women's fiction and the Great War
- Women's fiction of the Second World War : gender, power, and resistance
- Woolf and Lessing : breaking the mold
- Writers in exile : the identity of home in modern literature
- Writing beyond the ending : narrative strategies of twentieth-century women writers
- Writing the colonial adventure : race, gender, and nation in Anglo-Australian popular fiction, 1875-1914
- Writing the meal : dinner in the fiction of early twentieth-century women writers
- Writing war : fiction, gender, and memory
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