共 43 条
[1]
Abdykadyrova Siuita, 2021, Open Journal of Modern Linguistics, V11, P140
[2]
Adamchuk Nataliya, 2023, International Journal of Philology, V27, P93, DOI [10.31548/philolog14(2).2023.010, DOI 10.31548/PHILOLOG14(2).2023.010]
[3]
al-Din Tabib Rashid, 1987, Oghuz-name
[5]
[Anonymous], 1940, Koroghlu
[6]
[Anonymous], 11 Arthur F. Bethea, and Elyse Graham and Pericles Lewis situate Woolf's novel in conversation with the changing roles of religion in twentieth-century public life. See, Arthur F. Bethea, "Septimus Smith, the War-Shattered Christ Substitute in Mrs. Dalloway," The Explicator 68, no. 4 (2010): 249-252
[7]
Elyse Graham and Pericles Lewis, "Private Religion, Public Mourning, and Mrs. Dalloway," Modern Philology 111, no. 1 (2013): 88-106. Katherine Lynn Ryan examines Woolf's work alongside crowd theory and affective contagion in the face of population increase. See, Katherine Lynn Ryan, "Modernism's Suicidal Impulse: Psychic Contamination and the Crowd" (PhD diss., University of California, Irvine, 2014.) Deborah Guth, Joseph Allen Boone, Christopher Damien Chung, Victor Brombert, and Molly Hite al
[8]
Joseph Allen Boone, Libidinal Currents: Sexuality and the Shaping of Modernism (Chicago London: The University of Chicago Press, 1998
[9]
Christopher Damien Chung, "'Almost Unnamable': Suicide in the Modernist Novel" (PhD diss., The University of Texas at Austin, 2008)
[10]
Victor Brombert, "Virginia Woolf-"Death Is the Enemy," The Hudson Review 63, no. 3 (2010): 429-444