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Skip to Search Results- 1Farnel, Sharon
- 1Fieldberg, Allison L
- 1Harrigan, Amanda
- 1LaFountain, Amber
- 1Novak Gustainis, Emily
- 1Roark, Kendall
- 2Modern Languages and Cultural Studies, Department of
- 2Modern Languages and Cultural Studies, Department of/Journal Articles (Modern Languages and Cultural Studies)
- 1University of Alberta Library
- 1University of Alberta Library/Libraries Staff Publications
- 1Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 1Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of /Theses and Dissertations
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Fall 2012
This dissertation is about the work of melancholy in the Victorian realist novel, particularly those texts written in the late 1840s. The representation of melancholy affords an examination of a wide scope of issues that relate to the family, generally, and to the role of the middle-class women...
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2016-04-07
Farnel, Sharon, Vashishtha, Saurabh , Novak Gustainis, Emily, LaFountain, Amber, Harrigan, Amanda, Roark, Kendall
This presentation for NADDI 2016 gives an overview of the processing work that has gone into research data description for the two types of collections being described in the "Bridging the Research Data Divide" project: special collections and contemporary research collections.
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De l’homogénéisation des associations lexicales créatives dickensiennes : le style dickensien mis à l’épreuve en traduction
Download2013
In Oliver Twist, many lexical associations are semantically heterogeneous. This phenomenon is visible at several linguistic levels, especially at the syntagmatic level, with metaphorical associations as well as with transferred collocations, and at the sentence level, with semantic zeugmas. These...
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2011
Etymology and literary exegesis are of a special significance as far as reading and translating Oliver Twist is concerned. In the first place, Dickens makes the most of the ressources of the English language by using, as a stylistic device, the various etymological roots of the vocabulary he has...