Villette Alfred PageVillette (1853) is a novel by English writer Charlotte Bront. It was the third and final novel she published in her lifetime, followed only by The Professor, her posthumously released first novel which was largely reconceived and rewritten as Villette. Inspired by Bronts experience traveling and teaching English in Brussels, where she went at the age of 26 with her sister Emily before returning alone the following year, Villette is the story of an
Orphan texts seeks to insert the orphan into the larger critical areas of the family and childhood in Victorian culture
the politics of Traveller exclusion and multiculturalism in Ireland examine the mechanics of exclusion resulting from institutional racism within political
literature and many other fields
It was the specific character of Renaissance epistolography
exciting and innovative organisation that opens up and extends previous scholarship of the suffrage movement
7 ha field in the Burdekin sugarcane-growing region of Australia to illustrate how PA technologies might be used to enhance sugarcane production
Founded by a Nabataean king in the late first century B
Decadent daughters and monstrous mothers interrogates Angela Carter’s feminist politics through the lens of European Gothic
In this fascinating and lavishly illustrated history
which is the largest epidemic area of stripe rust in the world
but most particularly of the "scientific method" as this pertains to the study of the human condition
from politics to personal life