Conor O'Loughlin | University of Huddersfield (original) (raw)

Conor O'Loughlin

Address: Leeds, England, United Kingdom

less

Related Authors

Matthew N . Hannah

andrew johnson

David Barnes

Sean Mark

Frederick Morel

Rosie Šnajdr

Vivian  Liska

Juno Jill Richards (they/them)

Ana Kršinić Lozica

Ana Kršinić Lozica

University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences [Filozofski fakultet]

Uploads

Papers by Conor O'Loughlin

Research paper thumbnail of To What Extent Does an Aesthetic of Violence Underpin Modernism?

This short paper aims to clarify the key aspects of modernism and its inception and perpetuation ... more This short paper aims to clarify the key aspects of modernism and its inception and perpetuation by writers such as Pound, Hulme and Marinetti, and how violent contextual foundations helped to shape the movement.

Research paper thumbnail of Surrounded With Her Image: An Exploration of Brontë's Wuthering Heights through Adaptation

This thesis aims to explore the various extends to which adaptation adheres to, detracts from, or... more This thesis aims to explore the various extends to which adaptation adheres to, detracts from, or expounds the narrative of Emily Brontë's 1847 novel Wuthering Heights, utilising theories from Hutcheon, Davison, and more.

Research paper thumbnail of To What Extent Does an Aesthetic of Violence Underpin Modernism?

This short paper aims to clarify the key aspects of modernism and its inception and perpetuation ... more This short paper aims to clarify the key aspects of modernism and its inception and perpetuation by writers such as Pound, Hulme and Marinetti, and how violent contextual foundations helped to shape the movement.

Research paper thumbnail of Surrounded With Her Image: An Exploration of Brontë's Wuthering Heights through Adaptation

This thesis aims to explore the various extends to which adaptation adheres to, detracts from, or... more This thesis aims to explore the various extends to which adaptation adheres to, detracts from, or expounds the narrative of Emily Brontë's 1847 novel Wuthering Heights, utilising theories from Hutcheon, Davison, and more.

Log In