Etudes anglaises
Klincksieck

I.S.B.N.sans
128 pages

p. 334 à 393
doi: en cours

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Vous consultez

Comptes rendus

Tome 56 2003/3

Comptes rendus

• HANS-JÜRGEN DILLER and MANFRED GÖRLACH, eds. — Towards a History of English as a History of Genres. (Heidelberg : Universitätsverlag C. Winter, 2001, 230 pp., DM 68.)
• JACEK FISIAK and PETER TRUDGILL, eds. — East Anglian English. (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2001, xii + 264 pp., £ 55.00.)
• ALBERT BAUGH and THOMAS CABLE. — A History of the English Language. 5th ed. (London: Routledge, 2002, xvi + 447 pp., £ 16.99.)
• ANDREW WAWN. — The Vikings and the Victorians. (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2002, xviii + 434 pp., £ 19. 99.)
• HOWARD JACKSON. — Lexicography: An Introduction. (London and New York: Routledge, 2002, x + 190 pp.)
• BARRY WINDEATT, ed. — The Book of Margery Kempe. (London: Longman, 2000, xvii + 474 pp., £ 24.99.)
• MARY-JO ARN, ed. — Charles d’Orléans in England 1415-1440. (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2000, x + 231 pp., £ 45.00, $ 75.00.)
• BETTY S. TRAVITSKY and ANNE LAKE PRESCOTT, eds. — Female and Male Voices in Early Modern England: An Anthology of Renaissance Writing. (New York: Columbia UP, 2000, xvi + 411 pp., $ 17.50., £ 11.50.)
• ULF LIE and ANNE HOLDEN RONNING, eds. — Dialoguing on Genres. (Oslo : Novus P, 2001, 269 pp., NOK 290, € 35.40.)
• PIERRE LEYRIS. — Rencontres de poètes anglais suivies de sonnets de Shakespeare. (Paris : José Corti, 2002, 295 pp., € 18.50.)
• CYDIA S. CLEGG. — Press Censorship in Jacobean England. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2001, xi-286 pp., £ 40.)
• DAVID LOEWENSTEIN. — Representing Revolution in Milton and his Contemporaries: Religion, Politics and Polemics in Radical Puritanism. (Cambridge, New York: Cambridge UP, 2001, xii + 413 pp.)
• BRIGITTE GLASER. — The Creation of Self in Aubiographical Forms of Writing in Seventeenth-Century England. (Heidelberg : Universitätsverlag C. Winter, 2001, 300 pp.)
• JAMES GRANTHAM TURNER. — Libertines and Radicals in Early Modern London: Sexuality, Politics and Literary Culture, 1630-1685. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002, xxii + 343 pp., £ 45.00.)
• SUSAN GREEN and STEVEN N. ZWICKER, eds. — John Dryden: A Tercentenary Miscellany. (San Marino, CA: Huntington Library P, 2001, vii + 255 pp., $ 15.00.)
• PATRICIA CRAWFORD and LAURA GOWING, eds. — Women’s Worlds in Seventeenth-Century England. A Sourcebook. (London: Routledge, 2000, xviii + 314 pp., £ 16.99.)
• LILIANE GALLET-BLANCHARD et MARIE-MADELEINE MARTINET, eds. — Georgian Cities. (Paris : PUPS, CATI, 2000, € 30.48.)
• DAVID WOMERSLEY. — Gibbon and “the watchmen of the Holy City.” The Historian and his reputation 1776-1815. (Oxford: Clarendon, 2002, xii +452 pp., £ 65.)
• PAMELA SHARPE, ed. — Women’s Work: The English Experience 1650-1914. (London: Arnold, 1998, xii + 368 pp., £ 16.99.)
• PAULA R. BACKSCHEIDER, ed. — Revising Women: Eighteenth-Century ‘Women’s Fiction’ and Social Engagement. (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 2000, xiii + 273 pp., $ 48.00.)
• DANIEL DEFOE. — The Consolidator. The Stoke Newington Daniel Defoe Edition. AMS Studies in the Eighteenth Century, 39. Eds. Joyce D. Kennedy, Michael Seidel, and Maximillian E. Novak. (New York: AMS P, 2001, lvii + 288 pp., $ 96.75.)
• MAURICE LÉVY. — Boswell, un libertin mélancolique. Sa vie, ses voyages, ses amours et ses opinions. (Grenoble : ELLUG, 2001, 413 pp., € 25.92.)
• VIVIEN JONES, ed. — Women and Literature in Britain 1700-1800. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2000, unpaginated chronology + 320 pp., Hb £ 37.50, Pb £ 13.95.)
• ALAN RICHARDSON. — Romanticism and the Science of the Mind. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2001, xx + 243 pp.)
• SEAMUS PERRY, ed. — Coleridge’s Notebooks: A Selection. (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2002, xxiv + 264 pp.)
• CHRISTINE KENYON-JONES. — Kindred Brutes: Animals in Romantic Period Writing. (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2001, 229 pp., £ 42.50.)
• CLARA TUITE. — Romantic Austen: Sexual Politics and the Literary Canon. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002, 242 pp., £ 37.50.)
• PENNY GAY. — Jane Austen and the Theatre. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002, 201 pp., £ 37.50.)
• ELIZABETH EGER, CHARLOTTE GRANT, CLIONA Ó GALLCHOIR, PENNY WARBURTON, eds. — Women, Writing and the Public Sphere: 1700-1830. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2001, xii + 313 pp., £ 37.50.)
• THAD LOGAN. — The Victorian Parlour. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2001, xvii + 282 pp., Hb £ 40.00, $ 59.95.)
• EMILY A. HADDAD. — Orientalist Poetics: The Islamic Middle East in nineteenth-century English and French poetry. (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2002, 228 pp., £ 40.)
• MARLENE TROMP, PAMELA K. GILBERT, and AERON HAYNIE, eds. — Beyond Sensation. Mary Elizabeth Braddon in Context. (New York: State U of New York P, 2000, xxviii + 302 pp., $ 19.95.)
• SELINA HASTINGS. — Nancy Mitford. (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1986; London: Vintage, 2002, xii + 274 pp., £ 7.99.)
• DOMINIC HIBBERD. — Wilfred Owen. A New Biography. (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2002, xix + 424 pp., £ 20.)
• JESSICA BERMAN. — Modernist Fiction, Cosmopolitanism, and the Politics of Community. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2001, x + 242 pp., $ 59.95.)
• BRAD BUCKNELL. — Literary Modernism and Musical Aesthetics: Pater, Pound, Joyce and Stein. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2001, xii + 288 pp., £ 40.)
• ANTONY ROWLAND. — Tony Harrison and the Holocaust. (Liverpool: Liverpool UP, 2001, x + 326 pp., Hb £ 14.95, Pb £ 32.95.)
• CHRISTIAN GUTLEBEN. — Nostalgic Postmodernism. The Victorian Tradition and the Contemporary British Novel. (Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi, 2001, 248 pp., € 45.)
• BARBARA STEVENS HEUSEL. — Iris Murdoch’s Paradoxical Novels: Thirty Years of Critical Reception. (Rochester, NY: Camden House, 2001, 185 pp., $55.)
• ALICE OSWALD. — Dart. (London: Faber, 2002, iii + 48 pp., £ 8.99.)
• K. J. HAYES, ed. — The Cambridge Companion to Edgar Allan Poe. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002, xx + 266 pp., £ 27.60.)
• TESSA HADLEY. — Henry James and the Imagination of Pleasure. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002, 205 pp., £ 37.50.)
• CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN. — Benigna Machiavelli. Trad. Pascale Voilley. (Paris : Viviane Hamy, 2000, 203 pp., 129 FF.)
• MICHAEL TRATNER. — Deficits and Desires. Economics and Sexuality in Twentieth-Century Literature. (Stanford, Ca: Stanford UP, 2001, 238 pp., £ 30, $ 45.)
• FRÉDÉRIC DUMAS. — La quête identitaire et son incription dans l’œuvre de Nelson Algren. (Paris : L’Harmattan, 2001, 464 p., € 38.11.)
• JUDIE NEWMAN. — Alison Lurie: A Critical Study. (Amsterdam, Atlanta, 2000, Rodopi, B.V. Costerus, 220 pp., $ 34.)
• MARTINE AZUELOS et MARIE-CLAUDE ESPOSITO, éds. — Travail et emploi. L’expérience anglo-saxonne. Aspects contemporains. (Paris : L’Harmattan, 2001, 300 pp., € 22)
• PHILIPPE JACQUIN et DANIEL ROYOT. — Go West ! : Histoire de l’Ouest américain d’hier à aujourd’hui. (Paris : Flammarion, 2002, 362 pp., cartes, € 21.50.)
• ISABEL HOVING. — In Praise of New Travellers. Reading Caribbean Migrant Women’s Writing. (Stanford, Ca: Stanford UP, 2001, 375 pp., £ 15.95.)
• MARGARET ATWOOD. — Negotiating With the Dead: A Writer on Writing. (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2002, xxvii + 220 pp.)


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