1. |
Wuthering Heights and Christianity: The Closeness and the Distance. |
2. |
"Indelibly Written": How Writing is Written in Bleak House. |
3. |
Utter-Son, Utterson:The Appeal of "Mercy" in Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by R. L. Stevenson. |
4. |
Words Which Call Out: Fusion Presupposing Division in Virginia Woolf's Between the Acts. |
5. |
An Imaginative Transfer to the Distant: Virginia Woolf, Seen from the Viewpoint of G. C. Spivak. |
6. |
鵜飼信光, Catherine Earnshaw as the Spine of a Book--The Duplication of Self in Wuthering Heights, 『文学研究 第103号』, 103号、43−74ページ, 2006.03. |
7. |
Intermingling Activity and Passivity in Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray. |
8. |
The Fractal of Difference and Sameness in E. M. Forster's A Passage to India. |
9. |
The Unconscious Villain in Wuthering Heights. |
10. |
The Singing Old Woman in Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway. |
11. |
鵜飼信光, Peter Walsh's Dream: On Arbitrariness of Perception in Mrs. Dalloway, 『近代 78』神戸大学近代発行会, 78号、45-63, 1995.09. |