Show
Sort by
-
Transitions in Middlebrow writing, 1880-1930
(2015) -
Transitions in middlebrow writing, 1880–1930
Kate Macdonald (UGent) and Christoph Singer(2015) -
Novelists against social change : conservative popular fiction, 1920-1960
(2015) -
- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Women and their bodies in the popular reading of 1910
-
Introduction
-
General introduction: Utopian ideals in Edwardian political future fiction
-
Introduction: feminist future fiction
(2013) Political future fiction : speculative and counter-factual politics in Edwardian fiction. 2 : fictions of a feminist future. p.IX-XIV -
Commentary on the texts
(2013) Political future fiction : speculative and counter-factual politics in Edwardian fiction. 2 : fictions of a feminist future. p.267-286 -
- Miscellaneous
- open access
The Oxford History of the Novel in English, vol 4, The Reinvention of the British and Irish Novel 1880-1940
-
Edwardian transitions in the fiction of Una L Silberrad
-
Dorothy's literature class: late-Victorian women auto-didacts and penny fiction weeklies
-
The war-wounded and the congenitally impaired: competing categories of disability in John Buchan's Huntingtower (1922)
-
The symbiotic relationship of Thomas Nelson & Sons and John Buchan within the publisher's series
-
The use of London lodgings in middlebrow fiction, 1900-1930s
-
- Book Editor
- open access
The masculine middlebrow, 1880-1950: what Mr Miniver Read
Kate Macdonald (UGent)(2011) -
Introduction: identifying the middlebrow, the masculine, and Mr Miniver
-
- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
Saving, spending and serving: expressions of the use of time in the Dorothy and its supplements (1889-1899)
-
Finding and defining the Victorian supplement
-
John Buchan’s breakthrough: the conjunction of experience, markets and forms that made: the thirty-nine steps
-
Introduction
-
The diversification of Thomas Nelson & Sons: John Buchan and the Nelson archive, 1909-1911
-
Ignoring the New Woman: ten years of a Victorian weekly fiction magazine
-
- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
Hunted men in John Buchan's London, 1890s to 1920s
-
Introduction
-
John Buchan: a companion to the mystery fiction.
(2009) -
Reassessing John Buchan: Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps
Kate Macdonald (UGent)(2009) -
Aphrodite rejected: archetypal women in John Buchan's fiction
-
Mrs Warren's professions: Eliza Warren Francis (1810-1900), editor of The Ladies' Treasury (1857-1895) and London boarding-house keeper
-
More octaves than sestets
-
Douglas Mack; Scottish Fiction and the British Empire
-
Darkness at Pemberley: T.H. White and the Conventions
-
Introduction
-
Christine Berberich, The Image of the English Gentleman in Twentieth-Century Literature. Englishness and Nostalgia
-
'Nothing Like the Sun' door RSC & Opera North
-
Annika Bautz, the reception of Jane Austen and Walter Scott: a comparative longitudinal study
-
BORROWING AND SUPPLEMENTING: THE INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION OF 'COMPLETE STORY' NOVELETTES AND THEIR SUPPLEMENTS, 1865-1900
-
The Dorothy and its supplements: A Late-Victorian Novelette (1889-1899)
-
Translating propaganda: John Buchan’s writing during the First World War
-
- Journal Article
- A2
- open access
The travels of John Betjeman's literary voice in 'the arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel': from the 1890s to the 1920s, and back again
-
John Buchan as publisher
-
- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Writing 'The War': John Buchan's lost journalism of the First World War
-
John Buchan.
-
Introduction and footnotes.
-
Introduction and footnotes
(1993) Greenmantle.