Fleissner, Robert F.
Fleissner, Robert F., 1932-....
Robert F. Fleissner author
Fleissner, Robert F., 1932-2017
VIAF ID: 41859637 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/41859637
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Fleissner ‡b Robert F. ‡f 1932-....
-
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Fleissner, Robert F.
-
- 100 1 0 ‡a Fleissner, Robert F.
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Fleissner, Robert F.
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Fleissner, Robert F. ‡d 1932-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Fleissner, Robert F., ‡d 1932-....
-
- 100 0 _ ‡a Robert F. Fleissner ‡c author
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (7)
5xx's: Related Names (2)
- 510 2 _ ‡a Central State University ‡g Wilberforce, Ohio ‡4 affi ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#affiliation ‡e Affiliation
- 551 _ _ ‡a Springfield, Ohio ‡4 ortw ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfActivity
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Ascending the Prufrockian stair studies in a dissociated sensibility | |
Dickens and Shakespeare; a study in histrionic contrasts | |
Frost's road taken | |
The master sleuth on the trail of Edwin Drood : Sherlock Holmes and the Jasper syndrome, an annotated pastiche | |
Names, titles, and characters by literary writers Shakespeare, 19th and 20th century authors | |
Prince and the Professor the Wittenberg connection in Marlowe, Shakespeare, Goethe, and Frost a Hamlet-Faust (us) Analogy | |
Resolved to love the 1592 edition of Henry Constable's Diana | |
rose by another name a survey of literary flora from Shakespeare to Eco | |
Shakespeare and Africa : the dark lady of his sonnets revamped and other Africa-related associations | |
Shakespeare and the matter of the crux : textual, topical, onomastic, authorial, and other puzzlements | |
Shakespearean and other literary investigations with the master sleuth (and Conan Doyle) homing in on Holmes | |
Shakespearean puzzles : essays on textual, dramatic, and biographical enigmas in some plays by Shakespeare | |
Sources, meaning, and influences of Coleridge's 'Kubla Khan' Xanadu re-routed a study in the ways of romantic variety | |
T. S. Eliot and the heritage of Africa the magus and the moor as metaphor |