“The Martian Chronicles”
61.
T.S. Eliot and his contribution to the development of modernist poetry.
62.
“A Portrait of an artist as a young man” by James Joyce as an education novel.
63.
The “stream of consciousness” technique in ”Virginia Woolf’s novels
64.
Dashiell Hammett as a forerunner of a style of “tough” detective fiction “The
Maltese Falcon”.
65.
World War II in Norman Mailer’s naturalistic novel “The Naked and the Dead”
66.
Multicultural voices in American literature of XX century: Scott Momaday and
his novel “The Way to Rainy Mountain”
67.
The racial climate in Richard Wright’s works “Native Son” and “Black Boy”
68.
The theme of corruption in William Faulkner’s trilogy of Snopeses “The
Hamlet”, “The Town”, “The Mansion”.
69.
S. Lewis’ novel “Arrowsmith” and its impact on further development of
American literature.
70.
Charles Percy Snow and his cycle of novels “Strangers and Brothers”.
71.
James Jones and his anti-war novels “From Here to Eternity” and “The Thin
Red Line”.
72.
Specificity of Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel “When We Were Orphans”
73.
Isaac Asimov and scientific-fantastic fiction in American Literature
74.
Specificity of Ted Hughes’ poetry “Hawk in the Rain”
75.
“The Bell Jar” by Sylvia Plath as a semi-autobiographical novel
303
76.
“Angry young man” in English Literature of the 20th Century (Sir Kinsley
Amis)
77.
Female characters in the novel “The Voyage out” by V. Woolf
78.
Supernatural characters identities in Anne Rice’s novel “Interview with the
Vampire”
79.
Exposition of English society in Henry Fielding’s best plays.
80.
The corruption of American innocence through the pursuit of wealth in “The
Great Gatsby” F.S. Fitzgerald
81.
Racial discrimination in Maya Angelou’s best works
82.
The theme of rebel in Jack Kerouac’s works.
83.
Norman Mailer and the main themes of his novel “The Armies of the Night”.
84.
American poetry of the 1
st
half of the 20
th
century. The specificity of Edgar Lee
Masters’ poetry.
85.
James Fennimore Cooper and his contribution to the development of American
literature
86.
James Fennimore Cooper’s “Leather Stocking” cycle of novels.
87.
Naturalism in American literature. Nathaniel Hawthorne - his life and work
88.
Edgar Allan Poe as a detective short story writer.
89.
Peculiarities of writing style in the novel “Moby Dick” by Herman Melville.
90.
American feminism in Margaret Fuller and Lydia Maria Child works
91.
Charlotte Bronte and feminine identity in her novel “Jane Eyre”.
92.
Abolitionism as a social struggle against slavery reflected in American
literature.
93.
American capitalism in Theodore Dreiser’s “Trilogy of Desire” - “The
Financier”, “The Titan”, “The Stoic”.
94.
“Uncle Tom's Cabin” by Harriet Beecher-Stowe as an anti-slavery novel
95.
The social freedom of women in E. Wharton’s short story “Roman Fever”
96.
The Fireside Group of Poets. (Oliver Wendell Holmes and John Greenleaf
Whittier)
97.
The description of social life in Frank Norris’ novel “The Octopus”
98.
Peculiarities of John Steinbeck’s writing style in his novel “Of Mice and Men”
99.
The Jewish-origin American writers and the key problems in their works
(Bernard Malamud and Saul Bellow).
100.
Sh. Anderson as a connoisseur of American rural lifestyle.
101.
Sh. Anderson’s short story collection “The Triumph of the Egg”
102.
The development of American realism. Mark Twain and his contribution to the
development of true American novel
103.
The power of knowledge in Christopher Marlowe’s “The Tragic History of
Doctor Faustus”
104.
Optimism in Daniel Defoe’s “The life and adventures of Robinson Crusoe”
105.
Corruption in religion and learning Jonathan Swift’s “A Tale of a Tub”
304
106.
Exposition of English society in Henry Fielding’s best novels
107.
Sentimentalist poets of the 18
th
century. J. Thomson and Th. Gray
108.
R. B. Sheridan’ s “Pizarro” as a political tragedy
109.
Zora Neale Hurston and specificity of her novel “Their Eyes Were Watching
God”
110.
Images of exploited children in William Blake’s “Songs of Innocence” and
“Songs of Experience”
111.
British fantasy fiction in the 20
th
century. (Clive Staples Lewis)
112.
American capitalism in William Dean Howells’s novel “The Rise of Silas
Lapham”
113.
The world of business, merchandising in Upton Sinclair’s novel “The Jungle”
114.
The theme of financial independence in Edith Wharton’s “The House of Mirth”
115.
The social problems in the “working class” novels after the WWII
116.
The religious allegory in William Langland’s “Piers, the Plowman”
117.
Sir Thomas Malory. Prose epic “The Death of Arthur”
118.
Sir Thomas More as a founder of “Utopia” genre
119.
Edmund Spenser’s legacy and the image of Elizabeth I in epic poem “Faerie
Queene”.
120.
Ben Johnson as an author of the first original play.
121.
John Milton’s legacy and the theme of rebellion in his works
122.
John Dryden’s legacy and its influence on further development of English
literature.
123.
John Bunyan’s “The Pilgrim’s Progress” as a travel narrative
124.
Morality in W. Shakespeare’s best comedies.
125.
The theme of revenge in W. Shakespeare’s best tragedies.
126.
The theme of doomed love and optimism in W. Shakespeare’s best tragedies.
127.
“Love triangle” in W. Shakespeare’s best sonnets.
128.
Political struggle in W. Shakespeare’s historical dramas
129.
The power of absolute rule in Christopher Marlowe’s “Tamburlaine the Great”
130.
Specific features of Edgar a. Poe’s poetry – “totality effect”
131.
The power of money in Christopher Marlowe’s “The Jew of Malta”
132.
Biblical themes in John Milton’s tragedy “Samson Agonistes”
133.
Samuel Richardson’s novel “Pamela; or virtue rewarded” as an epistolary
novel.
134.
Henry Fielding’s legacy. “The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling” as a self-
cultivation novel.
135.
The description of village life in Oliver Goldsmith’s poetry
136.
Metaphysical poets and their influence on British poetry and criticism
137.
“The Beggar’s Opera” by John Gay as ‘a Newgate pastoral’.
138.
The essence of the mock heroic in Alexander Pope’s “The Rape of the Lock”.
139.
The first positive image of a bourgeois in Daniel Defoe’s “The Life and
Adventures of Robinson Crusoe”
140.
American women-writers of the 19
th
century and the main themes of their
305
works
141.
Kate Chopin’s “disobedience” in the novel “The Awakening”
142.
The contrast of town and village life in Laurence Stern’s novels
143.
Political and religious controversies in Jonathan Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels”
144.
Henry Fielding parodies on Samuel Richardson’s novels.
145.
Lyrical poems by Robert Burns – a great Scottish bard.
146.
Humanism in Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel “Never let me go”
147.
Sarcasm in “A Modest Proposal” written by Jonathan Swift.
148.
Samuel Richardson’s legacy and its influence on the development of an
epistolary novel.
149.
“The Castle of Otranto” by Horace Walpole as a gothic novel
150.
The sinister realities in Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic novels
151.
“Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley as a first science fiction in English literature
152.
William Blake and the main themes in his poems “The Marriage of Heaven and
Hell”
153.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and peculiarities of his poem “The Rime of the
Ancient Mariner”.
154.
The relationship between emotion and reality in John Keats’s poems
“Isabella” and “Lamia”
155.
"The Poet of the American Revolution” – Philip Freneau
156.
The power of love to humankind in Percy Bysshe Shelley’s poem “Prometheus
Unbound”
157.
George Gordon Noel Lord Byron’s “Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage” and the
image of a romantic hero
158.
Literary descendants in Heathcliff character in Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering
Heights”
159.
British fantasy fiction in the 20
th
century. (Tolkien, J. R. R.)
160.
W.E. B. Du Bois’ radical challenge to racial inequality in his poem “The Souls
of Black Folk”
161.
Anti-colonial novels of James Aldridge.
162.
Norman Lewis and his anti-colonial novels
163.
American Southern industrial problems in Erskine Caldwell’s novel “God’s
Little Acre”
164.
Contemporary English Poetry. Liverpool poets and their creative works.
165.
Oscar Wilde and his main theory “Art for Art’s Sake” reflected in his works.
166.
The main themes raised in Margaret Drabble’s literary works.
167.
Young adult’s problems in “April Morning” by Howard Fast.
168.
Depression-era in American literature. The rural poverty in Erskine Caldwell’s
novel “Tobacco Road”
169.
Robert Lipsyte’s “The Contender” and its contribution to coming of age
literature.
170.
American poetry of the 1
st
half of 20
th
century. The specificity of Edwin
Arlington Robinson’s poetry.
306
171.
Youth revolt in J.D. Salinger’s “The Catcher in the Rye”.
172.
“Beat generation” problems reflected in the USA literature.
173.
J.D. Salinger’s philosophical views reflected in his best works.
174.
Youth problems reflected in the novel of the 21
st
century novel.
175.
“The Age of Innocence” by Edith Wharton and social problem raised in it.
176.
“Pride and Prejudice” by Jane Austen – as a classic novel of manners.
177.
The racial problems shown in “Invisible Man” by Ralph Waldo Ellison
178.
The literature of the “angry young men” in Great Britain
179.
Experimentation in American literature (Norman Mailer)
180.
The Harlem Renaissance. (Langston Hughes).
181.
Black identity in Zora Neale Hurston’s novels.
182.
The moral and mental degradation in W. Faulkner’s novel “The Sound and the
Fury”
183.
John Dos Passos “Three Soldiers” as one of the key anti-war novels
184.
Female characters in Ch. Dickens’ novel “Little Dorrit”
185.
Black community in Ralph Ellison’s novel “Invisible Man”
186.
Panorama of American life in Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn”
187.
The problem of childhood in Ch. Dickens’ novel “Oliver Twist”
188.
Family relations in the novel “The Sound and the Fury” by W. Faulkner
189.
Peculiarities of writing style in the novel “Moby Dick” by Herman Melville.
190.
Obsession with conventional ideas of beauty in Toni Morrison’s novel “The
Bluest Eye”,
191.
The image of Native Americans in James Fenimore Cooper's novels
192.
James Baldwin’s novels – an outcry of Afro-Americans’ problems
193.
The formation of main protagonist in Saul Bellow’s novel “The Adventures of
Augie March”
194.
Expatriates in American Literature: Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot
195.
E. Hemingway’s war experiences in his novel “A Farewell to Arms”
196.
William Butler Yeats’ poetry and its influence on British literature
197.
Family relations in Thomas Wolfe’s novel “Look Homeward, Angel”
198.
The description of social problems in John Steinbeck’s novel “The Grapes of
Wrath”
199.
Anti-fascist aspects of E. Hemingway’s novel “For Whom the Bell Tolls”
200.
William Seward Burroughs as the representative of the “Beat Generation”
literature
201.
The racial climate in Richard Wright’s works “Native Son” and “Black Boy”
202.
The theme of corruption in William Faulkner’s novels “The Hamlet”, “The
Town”, “The Mansion”
203.
Social aspects of academic life in S. Lewis’ novel “Arrowsmith”
307
204.
The folklore and cultural heritage in T. Morrison’s novel “Song of Solomon”
205.
American capitalism in U. Sinclair’s novel “The Jungle”
206.
American style of life in Sinclair Lewis’ novels
207.
The female rogues in Daniel Defoe’s “A History of Lady Roxana”
208.
Zora Neale Hurston as one of Harlem’s most flamboyant and brilliant writers.
209.
The fate of an individual in Arthur Miller’s work “Death of a Salesman”
210.
Langston Hughes and his best collection of verse “Shakespeare in Harlem”
211.
J. Fowles’ contribution to the development of neo-Victorian novel.
212.
American literature after the WWII. James Jones and his novel “From Here to
Eternity”
213.
Ann Redcliff as a founder of traditions of English gothic fiction
214.
From fantasy to science fiction – M. Shelly and the “Monsters of the
Imagination”
215.
Doris
Lessing’s
contribution
to
the
development
of
feminine
literature.(“Children of violence”)
216.
Identity formation in “The Moon and Sixpence” by Somerset Maugham
217.
“Beloved” by T. Morrison and the complex narrative of slavery.
218.
“The right way and the good way” in John Updike’s and work "Rabbit
Angstrom: A Tetralogy”
219.
Terrorism in Don Delillo’s work “Players”
220.
John Updike’s cycle of novels about “Rabbit”
221.
Problems of childhood and education in Charles Dickens’ novels.
222.
The problems of snobbism in “Vanity Fair” by W. Thackeray .
223.
The role of women in society in Charlotte Bronte`s novel “Jane Eyre”.
224.
John Galsworthy and “Forsytism” as a high society lifestyle in his trilogy
“Forsyte Saga”.
225.
Bernard Shaw and his well- known method of paradoxes in his plays.
226.
The development of drama in the XIX- XX centuries. Bernard Shaw and his
contribution to English literature.
227.
Scientific-fantastic novels in English literature. H. G. Wells and his “Invisible
Man”.
228.
Christopher Marlowe`s main themes in his tragedies.
229.
W. Shakespeare’s humanism and an English national character.
230.
The importance of Shakespeare`s sonnets in English literature.
231.
Daniel Defoe and his essay on “Education of Women”.
232.
Philosophy of existentialism in the works written by Iris Murdoch.
233.
J. B. Priestly is a playwright and novelist.
234.
J. B. Priestly and the psychological problems in his work “Dangerous Corner”
235.
British fairy and folk tales as a basement of a fantasy genre
236.
The reflection of traditional values in Amy Tan’s novel “The Kitchen God’s
308
Wife”
237.
G.G. Lord Byron as a revolutionary poet.
238.
Transcendentalism and its representatives in American literature
239.
The social aspects of G. Orwell’s novel “Animal Farm”
240.
American drama at the turn of the XX-XXI centuries
241.
The main themes in Edgar Allan Poe’s collection of poem “The Raven”
242.
Panorama of American life in Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer”
and “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn”
243.
Major themes raised in Kurt Vonnegut’s “Mother Night”.
244.
The theme of isolation in Tennessee William’s “The Glass Menagerie”
245.
Description of social life in Henry James’ novel “Daisy Miller”
246.
Ernest Hemingway’s “theory of iceberg” and its traditions in Modern
Literature.
247.
Doris
Lessing’s
contribution
to
the
development
of
feminine
literature.(“Children of violence”)
248.
Romantic love and “American Dream” in Scott Fitzgerald’s novel “The Great
Gatsby”
249.
American poetry at the turn of the XX-XXI centuries
250.
Native American literature in XX century.
251.
The theme of American capitalism in Theodore Dreiser’s novel “An American
Tragedy”
252.
Women characters in Th. Dreiser’s novel “Sister Carrie” and “Jenny Gerhardt”
253.
Sid Chaplin as a representative of the “working class novel” trend
254.
“Angry young men” trend and its best representatives (John Wain, John Brain,
Kingsley Amis)
255.
Willkie Collins and his sensational novel “ The Woman in White”
256.
Money and morality in Theodore Dreiser’s novel “Sister Carrie”
257.
The Theatre of the Absurd. Samuel Beckett’s absurd play “Waiting for Godot”
258.
“It Can’t Happen Here” by Sinclair Lewis as an anti-utopian, anti-fascist novel
259.
Sh. Anderson’s literary traditions in his novel “Poor White”
260.
Raymond Carver and his short stories “Will You Please Be Quiet, Please?”
261.
Social aspects of John Steinbeck’s novel “The Grapes of Wrath”
262.
Raymond Carver and his work “Where Water Comes Together with Other
Water”
263.
Criminal aspects in Truman Capote’s documentary work “In Cold Blood”
264.
Norman Mailer and his documentary novel “An Executioner’s Song”
265.
The struggle of nature and a man in Herman Melville’s novel “Moby Dick, or
the White Whale”.
266.
British fantasy fiction of the XX century.
267.
The image of contemporary British woman in the novel “Bridget Jones’s
Dairy” by E. Fielding
268.
Moral aspects of “An American Tragedy” by Th. Dreiser
269.
Maya Angelou and her work “I Know Why the Caged Birds Sing”
309
270.
Women and family relations in J. Fowles’ novels “French lieutenant’s woman”
271.
The description of provincial life in the novel “Main Street” by Sinclair Lewis
272.
D. Salinger’s philosophical views reflected in his best works.
273.
Josephine Herbst and her Depression-era trilogy “Pity Is Not Enough”,
“Executioner Waits” and “Rope of Gold”
274.
Racial attitudes in Joyce Carol Oates’ novel “It is Bitter, and Because it is My
Heart”
275.
The balance between upbringing and freedom of choice in “The House of
Mirth” by Edith Wharton
276.
Ray Bradbury and scientific-fantastic fiction in American Literature
277.
Morals of the people of bohemia in W.S. Maugham’s novel “Theatre”
278.
Development of a detective genre in English literature. Agatha Christie - her
life and work.
279.
American detective novels of the XX century.
280.
Richard Wright and his short stories “Uncle Tom’s Children”
281.
The socio-political issues raised in Harper Lee’s novel “To Kill a
Mockingbird”.
282.
Jack London and his northern stories
283.
Allen Ginsberg as one of the poets of the “Beat generation”
284.
“The Castle of Otranto” by Horace Walpole as a gothic novel
285.
The sinister realities in Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic novels
286.
“Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley as the first science fiction in English literature
287.
Stephan King and modern scientific-fantastic fiction in American Literature
288.
Gloria E. Anzalduas as one of the main representatives of “Chicano” literature
289.
The relationships of mothers and daughters in Amy Tan’s best-known novel
“The Joy Luck Club”
290.
Social aspects of Henry James’ novel “The Portrait of a Lady”
291.
J. D. Salinger’s “The Catcher in the Rye” and the identity-formation of the
youth
292.
Post-colonial literature and Jean Rhys’ novel “Wide Sargasso Sea”.
293.
The theme of youth rebel in Jack Kerouac’s works.
294.
Norman Mailer’s and the main themes of his novel “The Armies of the Night”.
295.
Thomas Pynchon and the protest against the war in Vietnam in his work “The
Crying of in Vietnam Lot 49”
296.
The racial conflict in Leslie Marmon Silko’s novel “Almanac of the Dead”.
297.
“Angry young man” in English Literature of the 20th Century (John Osborne)
298.
Family values and relations reflected in Truman Capote’s “In Cold Blood”.
299.
Problem of “family roots” in John Cheever’s stories
300.
Bernard Show`s concern for the perfection of the English language in his
comedy “Pygmalion”.
301.
The method of “Stream of consciousness” in James Joyce’s novel “Ulysses”.
302.
Katherine Mansfield and ironic objectivity in her story “A Cup of Tea”.
303.
Richard Aldington and main themes dominated in his works.
310
304.
Social and political problems in Archibald Joseph Cronin`s novel “The Stars
Look Down”.
305.
The life and work of an intellectual in Archibald Joseph Cronin`s novel “The
Citadel”.
306.
Graham Greene`s “entertainment” and “serious” novels.
307.
Iris Murdoch and her philosophical novel “Under the Net”
308.
The problem of generation in the George Meredith’s novel “The Ordeal of
Richard Feverel”
309.
James Aldridge`s social and psychological novel “Signed with Their Honour”.
310.
War and peace in James Jones’ novel “From Here to Eternity “
311.
The representation of a woman’s status in Sh. Bronte’s novels.
312.
An environmental catastrophe in the novel “White Noise” by Don De Lillo
313.
Expatriates in American Literature: Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot
314.
Raymond Carver as one of the finest short-story writers. (“Will You Please Be
Quiet, Please?”)
315.
Norman Mailer’s “Why Are We in Vietnam?” publicist work as a protest
against the war
316.
Native American literature. N. Scott Momaday’s novel “House Made of
Dawn”.
317.
Problems raised in Jack London’s social novel “Iron Heel”
318.
Racism issues in “Cane” by Jean Toomer.
319.
“Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” by Robert Louis Stevenson as a supernatural novel.
320.
Humor and satire in Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s poetry
321.
The conflict of realism and idealism in W.S. Maugham’s “Of Human
Bondage”.
322.
William Blake and philosophical symbolism in his poems.
323.
Psychological development of the characters in George Eliot’s novel “Daniel
Deronda”.
324.
Afro-American playwright August Wilson and his best play “Ma Rainey's
Black Bottom”
325.
Simplicity and unexpected juxtaposition of images in Susan Hill`s works.
326.
Tennessee Williams and the major themes raised in his play “A Streetcar
Named Desire”
327.
Naturalism rendered in Jack London’s “The Sea-Wolf”
328.
Social aspects of Stephen King’s novel “The Green Mile”
329.
Major themes raised in Kurt Vonnegut’s “Mother Night”.
330.
The theme of isolation and loneliness in Tennessee William’s “The Glass
Menagerie”
331.
“Angry Young Men” in John Osborn’s play “Look Back in Anger”.
332.
Social problems in Ray Bradbury’s “Fahrenheit 451”.
333.
The depiction of post-war Britain in the novel “Chrome Yellow” by Aldous
Huxley
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