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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Post, Ben – Hispania, 2016
Eighteenth-century actor and playwright Eusebio Vela, long thought to be born in Mexico but actually born in Spain, dominated Mexico City's Coliseo theater for decades and has been variously interpreted as a creole patriot or as a Spanish propagandist. Vela's four extant plays, which treat the fall of Spain, Telemachus's wanderings in the…
Descriptors: Eighteenth Century Literature, Drama, Playwriting, Foreign Countries
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Doherty, Peter – Children's Literature in Education, 2017
This article considers the extent to which medieval "mappaemundi" are an important precedent for literary cartographies in fiction for children. It connects the notion of embeddedness to Peta Mitchell's (2011) suggestion that "mappaemundi" refused to entertain the later, post-Enlightenment cartographic distinction between…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Maps, Cartography, Medieval Literature
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Furniss, Tom – Science & Education, 2014
Rather than focussing on the relationship between science and literature, this article attempts to read scientific writing as literature. It explores a somewhat neglected element of the story of the emergence of geology in the late eighteenth century--James Hutton's unpublished accounts of the tours of Scotland that he undertook in the years…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geology, Eighteenth Century Literature, Literary Devices
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Halsey, Katie – Oxford Review of Education, 2015
This essay explores the relationship between theories of domestic pedagogy as articulated in eighteenth-century conduct books, and fictional representations of home education in novels of the period. The fictional discussions of domestic pedagogy interrogate eighteenth-century assumptions about the innate superiority of a domestic education for…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Females, Eighteenth Century Literature, Novels
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Lustig, T. J. – Children's Literature in Education, 2014
The article begins by assessing Enid Blyton's contribution to the Arthurian revival of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, setting this in the context of longstanding debates about the function of children's literature. It goes on to argue that Blyton's use of the story of Enid in "The Knights of the Round…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Literary Genres, Eighteenth Century Literature, Literature Appreciation
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Modia, María Jesús Lorenzo; Álvarez, Begoña Lasa – International Education Studies, 2011
The purpose of this essay is to analyse the teaching of literature with a competency-based approach. This is exemplified by means of a thorough study of a poetic duel between two relevant eighteenth-century writers, Jonathan Swift and Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, and more specifically, by means of the satires entitled respectively "The Lady's…
Descriptors: Eighteenth Century Literature, English Literature, Poetry, Satire
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Xu, Runjiang; Li, Yucheng – English Language Teaching, 2009
This thesis attempts to search for the clues related to British domestic exploitation of the peasant labors and overseas colonization of other countries after rereading the novel "Pride and Prejudice," with an aim to bring out Austen's intimacy with Imperialism. It will offer some insights into a better understanding of provincial world…
Descriptors: Novels, Didacticism, Literature Appreciation, Literary Criticism
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Browne, Stephen H. – Communication Monographs, 1988
Analyzes Edmund Burke's "Letter to a Noble Lord," noting that it not only reflects Burke's character, but also represents a significant example of the public letter as a rhetorical form and illustrates Burke's concern for the alignment of principle with public action. (MM)
Descriptors: Eighteenth Century Literature, Letters (Correspondence), Political Attitudes, Rhetorical Criticism
Curran, Stuart – ADE Bulletin, 1988
Notes that although women dominated the English world of letters in the late 1700s, eighteenth-century women writers have been ignored by literary scholars and historians. Asserts that this discrimination in favor of the canonized Romantics, such as Blake and Wordsworth, excludes women Romantics' valuable and lively literary contributions. (MM)
Descriptors: Authors, Eighteenth Century Literature, Females, Literary History
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Browne, Stephen H. – Communication Quarterly, 1990
Examines, rhetorically, the formal dynamics and internal action of an eighteenth-century political text by Edmund Burke, the "Letter to William Elliott, Esq." (1795). (SR)
Descriptors: Eighteenth Century Literature, Foreign Countries, Letters (Correspondence), Political Issues
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List, Karen K. – Journalism Quarterly, 1989
Examines eighteenth-century periodical literature published in Philadelphia to explore the major shift of women's roles in the United States during the period following the American Revolution. Notes that independence remained a male prerogative in periodicals, while women's issues and movements toward self-realization were ignored. (MM)
Descriptors: Eighteenth Century Literature, Females, Feminism, Periodicals
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Sotiropoulos, Carol Strauss – Children's Literature in Education, 2001
Argues that precepts for cultivating the rational child, illustrated by Maria and Richard Edgeworth in their handbook "Practical Education," collide with fictional presentations of those precepts in Maria's novella "The Good French Governess." Considers how the collision between the demands of ideology and the needs of fiction…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Educational Practices, Educational Principles, Eighteenth Century Literature
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Braun, Theodore E. D.; And Others – French Review, 1988
Two different approaches to teaching Voltaire's "Candide", one deriving meaning from the textual fabric or "inside" of the story and the other focusing on the author's "external" intent in writing the story, are presented and compared. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cultural Context, Eighteenth Century Literature, French Literature
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Benton, Michael – Children's Literature in Education, 1996
Examines issues about the representation of children in art during the 18th and 19th centuries: (1) main representations during this period; (2) principal influences affecting the construction of these images; and (3) whether the verbal and visual arts conceptualize childhood in similar or different ways. Looks at three influences on writers and…
Descriptors: Art History, Children, Childrens Literature, Eighteenth Century Literature
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Browne, Stephen H. – Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 1992
Examines the 18th-century rhetorical convention of misogynist satire and how it shaped attitudes toward women speakers. Focuses not so much on the formal properties of the satire but on its convention and content as modes of insinuation. Surveys prominent journals, newspapers, magazines, and reviews of the period. (TB)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Content Analysis, Eighteenth Century Literature, Females
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