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SLSA Bibliography

Bibliographies: 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2011

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Showing below keyword matches in entire database for "Robert Louis Stevenson":

Luckhurst, Roger. The Invention of Telepathy: 1807-1901. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Psychological & Cognitive Sciences
Keywords: Henry James | literature--19th C | Oscar Wilde | psychological and cognitive sciences | Robert Louis Stevenson | Sigmund Freud | telepathy | Thomas Huxley
Pamboukian, Sylvia Amy. "Industrial Light and Magic: Popular Science, Technology, and the Occult in the Late Victorian Period." Ph.D. Dissertation: Indiana University, 2003.
Literature, Science & the Arts
Keywords: Arthur Conan Doyle | automobiles | culture studies | Gothicism | H. G. Wells | horror | literature--19th C | magic | Occult Sciences | popular science | Robert Louis Stevenson | Rudyard Kipling | social sciences | technology | X-ray
Pansing, David Wallace. Addicted Subjects: Crime, Aesthetics, and British literature. Ph.D. Dissertation: Brown University, 2004.
Medicine
Keywords: addition | aesthetics | anarchy | Arthur Conan Doyle | E. W. Hornung | G. K. Chesterton | H. G. Wells | Havelock Ellis | Henry James | individuality | Irving Babbitt | J. K. Huysmans | Jacques Derrida | Joseph Conrad | Joseph Margolis | literature—19th-20th C | Ma Nordau | medicine | modernism | Psychological & Cognitive Sciences | Robert Louis Stevenson | self | Sigmund Freud | theory | Thomas De Quincey | Virginia Woolf
Verrips, Jojada. "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: Modern Medicine between Magic and Science." Magic and Modernity: Interfaces of Revelation and Concealment. Eds. Birgit Meyer, and Peter Pels. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2003. 223-40.
Literature, Science & the Arts
Keywords: anthropology | literature--19th C | magic | medicine | Occult Sciences | Robert Louis Stevenson | social sciences
Villacañas, Beatriz. “De doctores y monstrous: la ciencia como transgresión en Dr. Faustus, Frankenstein y Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde .” Asclepio 53, no. 1 (2001): 197-211.
Popular Sciences
Keywords: Christopher Marlowe | Mary Shelley | popular sciences | Robert Louis Stevenson