32) 5. The Hellenistic World, to 30 B.C.E. 2001. The Encyclopedia of World History ...male agnate. Unmarried free women were rare. In Egypt some women had greater freedom of movement, others the right to divorce without the permission of a male relative....
33) VIII. Shakespeare: Life and Plays: Bibliography. Vol. 5. The Drama to 1642, Part One. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...C.). 7 vols. 2nd ed., 9 vols., 1714. 17235. Works. Pope, A. (and Sewell, G.). 7 vols. Other eds.: 1728; 1735; 1768. 1733. Plays. Theobald, L. 7 vols. Other eds.:...
34) novel. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...novel is the social novel, which presents a panoramic picture of an entire age. Balzac's Human Comedy and Tolstoy's War and Peace became models for those that followed,...
35) §6. Rise of Formal Satire. XVI. London and the Development of Popular Literature. Vol. 4. Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas North to Michael Drayton. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–21 ...by extracting it from unproductive material, and he succeeds in uniting many of the lighter types of prose literature in a single pamphlet. He begins by introducing...
36) motion pictures. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001 ...and P. Von Bagh, Guide to the Cinema of Sweden and Finland (1999). 47 Nontheatrical FilmSpecial types of films include the documentary, the newsreel, and the animated...
37) 37. Traveling at Home and Abroad. Post, Emily. 1922. Etiquette ...as cultivation in a very high degree. 53 AMERICANS IN EUROPEAN SOCIETY It is only in musical comedy that one can go into a strange city and be picked out of the crowd...