-
Screen bound/skin bound :
the politics of embodiment in the posthuman age
-
The making and remaking of gender relations in Tanzanian fiction
-
Womens historical fiction after feminism : discursive reconstructions of the Tudors in contemporary literature
-
Return to the scene of the crime: The returnee detective and postcolonial crime fiction
-
Subversive narrative techniques and self-reflexivity in Vladimir Nabokov's the real life of Sebastian Knight, Lolita, Pnin, Pale Fire and Ada, or Ardor: A family Chronicle
-
"Stealing the story, salvaging the she" : feminist revisionist fiction and the bible
-
Complex urban identities : an investigation into the
everyday lived realities of cities as reflected in
selected postmodern texts
-
Negotiating (trans)national identities in Ugandan literature
-
A study of the major science fiction works of Gene Wolfe
-
The evolution of feminist utopias
-
Puffball and The handmaid's tale : the influence of pregnancy on the construction of female identity
-
The triumph of the (m)other : the feminine dichotomy in "Sleeping Beauty"
-
Alternative afterlives : secular expeditions to the undiscovered country
-
Negotiating femininity, ethnicity and history : representations of Ruth First in South African struggle narratives
-
O. Douglas and the borders of fictional identity
-
Past (pre)occupations, present (dis)locations : the nineteenth century restoried in texts from/about South Africa, Canada, Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand
-
Representations of women, identity and education in the novels of Tsitsi Dangarembga and Kopano Matlwa
-
Body/sexuality/control : female identity in four Fay Weldon novels
-
Separate and warring selves : identity crises in Africa in Shiva Naipaul's "North of South: an African journey"
-
Between wilderness and number : on literature, colonialism and the will to power
-
Re-constructing identity through language and vision in Margaret Atwood's Surfacing and Cat's Eye
-
The Death and Rebirth of the Feminine Muse: Edgar Allan Poe and Sylvia Plath
-
Tales of subversion : queering knowledge, female experience and patriarchy in Carmen Maria Machado’s literary landscape
-
The (neo-)Victorian madwoman : biofictional reconfigurations