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"Circle-sailing" : the eternal return of tabooed grief in Melville's Moby-Dick |
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"My first lie, and how I got out of it" : deprivation-grief and the making of an American humorist |
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"Blessed are they that mourn, for they--they--" : repressed grief and pathological mourning in Mark Twain's fiction |
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Huckleberry Finn's anti-Oedipus complex : father-loss and mother-hunger in the great American novel |
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The shaping of Hemingway's art of repressed grief : mother-loss and father-hunger from In our time to Winner take nothing |
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"Ether in the brain" : blunting the edges of perception in Hemingway's middle period |
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Grief hoarders and "beat-up old bastards" : Hemingway's bittersweet taste of nostalgia |
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"Circle-sailing" : the eternal return of tabooed grief in Melville's Moby-Dick |
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"My first lie, and how I got out of it" : deprivation-grief and the making of an American humorist |
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"Blessed are they that mourn, for they--they--" : repressed grief and pathological mourning in Mark Twain's fiction |
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