Shared more. Cited more. Safe forever.
    • advanced search
    • submit works
    • about
    • help
    • contact us
    • login
    Search 
    •   MOspace Home
    • Search
    •   MOspace Home
    • Search
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
    advanced searchsubmit worksabouthelpcontact us

    Discover

    Format
    Thesis (2)
    SubjectAmerican drama (1)American literature (1)American literature -- Adaptations (1)Aristotle -- Criticism and interpretation (1)Aristotle. De mirabilibus auscultationibus (1)... View MoreDate Issued2010 (1)2009 (1)Author/ContributorSwick, Marly A., 1949- (2)Ernster, Gretchen Marie (1)Knight, Lania, 1968- (1)Lewis, Trudy (Trudy L.) (1)Advisor
    Swick, Marly A., 1949- (2)
    Lewis, Trudy (Trudy L.) (1)Thesis Department
    English (MU) (2)
    Language (ISO)English (2)

    Browse

    All of MOspaceCommunities & CollectionsDate IssuedAuthor/ContributorTitleSubjectIdentifierThesis DepartmentThesis AdvisorThesis Semester

    Statistics

    Most Popular ItemsStatistics by CountryMost Popular AuthorsStatistics by Referrer

    Search

    [+] Search or Limit by Field[-] Search or Limit by Field

    Keyword search by field

    Search or limit your keyword search by selected fields.

    Now showing items 1-2 of 2

    • Sort Options:
    • Relevance
    • Title (ascending order: A-Z)
    • Title (descending order: Z-A)
    • Date Issued (oldest first)
    • Date Issued (recent first)
    • Results Per Page:
    • 5
    • 10
    • 20
    • 40
    • 60
    • 80
    • 100

    On marvellous things seen and heard 

    Ernster, Gretchen Marie (University of Missouri--Columbia, 2009)
    [ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT REQUEST OF AUTHOR.] Derived formally from Aristotle's Minor Work of the same title, my variation of "On Marvellous Things [Seen and] Heard" explores a range of literary ...

    Adaptation : re-creating the novel as a stage play 

    Knight, Lania, 1968- (University of Missouri--Columbia, 2010)
    The critical introduction examines Linda Hutcheon's notion that the process of adaptation is worthy of observation, and that in analyzing a novelist adapting her own work for the stage, we begin to see how the interiority ...

    Send Feedback
    hosted by University of Missouri Library Systems
     

     


    Send Feedback
    hosted by University of Missouri Library Systems