REPORT BIBLIOGRAPHY / ENGLISH 471 / SPRING 2004

 

Capper, Charles.  “Margaret Fuller as Cultural Reformer: The Conversations in Boston.”  American Quarterly 39 (1987): 509-28.  [4]

 

Colacurcio, Michael.  “’Excessive and Organic Ill’: Melville, Evil, and the Question of Politics.”  Religion and Literature 34 (2002): 1-26.   [16]

 

Crain, Caleb.  “Too Good to Be Believed: Emerson’s ‘Friendship’ and the Samaritans.”  In Crain, American Sympathy: Men, Friendship, and Literature in the New Nation (New Haven: Yale UP, 2001), 177-237 plus notes.   [7]

 

Early reviews of Moby-Dick.  In Hershel Parker and Harrison Hayford, eds., Moby-Dick 2nd Edition (NY: Norton Critical Edition, 2002), 595-625, plus Archibald MacMechan, “The Best Sea Story Ever Written” (628-35).   [11]

 

Friedl, Herwig.  “Fate, Power, and History in Emerson and Nietzsche.”  ESQ:A Journal of the American Renaissance 43 (1997): 267-93.   [2]

 

Grossberg, Benjamin Scott.  “’The Tender Passion Was Very Rife Among Us’: Coverdale’s Queer Utopia and The Blithedale Romance.”  Studies in American Fiction  28 (2000): 3-25.   [9]

 

Hayford, Harrison.  “Unnecessary Duplicates: A Key to the Writing of Moby-Dick.”  In Hershel Parker and Harrison Hayford, eds., Moby-Dick 2nd Edition (NY: Norton Critical Edition, 2002), 674-96.   [12]

 

Johnson, Linck C.  “Emerson, Thoreau’s Arrest, and the Trials of American Manhood.”  In The Emerson Dilemma: Essays on Emerson and Social Reform, ed. T. Gregory Garvey (Athens: U Georgia P, 2001), 35-64.   [3]

 

Karcher, Carolyn.  “The Riddle of the Sphinx: Melville’s ‘Benito Cereno’ and the Amistad Case.”  In Critical Essays on Herman Melville’s “Benito Cereno,”  ed. Robert E, Burkholder (New York: G.K. Hall, 1992), 196-229.   [15]

 

Kolodny, Annette.  “Inventing a Feminist Discourse: Rhetoric and Resistance in Margaret Fuller’s Woman in the Nineteenth Century.”  New Literary History 25 (1994): 355-82.   [6]

 

Larson, Kerry.  “Justice to Emerson.”  Raritan 21 (2002): 46-67.   [1]

 

Lawson, Andrew.  “’Spending for Vast Returns’: Sex, Class, and Commerce in the First Leaves of Grass.  American Literature 75 (2003): 335-65.   [17]

 

Martin, Robert K.  “Moby-Dick: ‘Our Heart’s Honeymoon.’” Chapter Three of Heroes, Captains and Strangers: Male Friendship, Social Critique, and Literary Form in the Sea Novels of Herman Melville (Chapel Hill: U North Carolina P, 1986), 67-94 plus notes.   [13]

 

Miller, John N.  “Eros and Ideology: At the Heart of Hawthorne’s Blithedale.”  Nineteenth-Century Literature 55 (2000): 1-21.   [8]

 

Parker, Hershel.  “Damned by Dollars: Moby-Dick­ and the Price of Genius.”  .  In Hershel Parker and Harrison Hayford, eds., Moby-Dick 2nd Edition (NY: Norton Critical Edition, 2002), 713-24.   [14]

 

Person, Leland.  “The Historical Paradoxes of Manhood in Cooper's The Deerslayer.”  Novel 32 (1998): 76-98.   [10]

 

Tonkovich, Nicole.  .  “Traveling in the West, Writing in the Library: Margaret Fuller’s Summer on the Lakes.”  Legacy 10 (1993): 79-102.   [5]

 

 

ARTICLES FOR FEBRUARY 19 CLASS

 

Berkson, Dorothy.  “’Born and Bred in Different Nations’: Margaret Fuller and Ralph Waldo Emerson.”  In Shirley Marchalonis, ed., Patrons and Proteges (New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1988), 3-30.

 

Mitchell, Thomas R.  “The ‘Riddle’ of Margaret Fuller” and “The ‘Scandal’ of Margaret Fuller.”  Chapters One and Two in Hawthorne’s Fuller Mystery (Amherst: U Massachusetts P, 1998), 1-40.

 

Zwarg, Christina.  “Emerson’s Scene Before the Women: Memoirs of Margaret Fuller Ossoli and ‘Woman.’”  Chapter Eight in Feminist Conversations: Fuller, Emerson, and the Play of Reading (Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1995), 238-68