
Internet Resources:
James Hogg Society
BENEDICT
,
Williston R. ”A Study of the ’second Self’ in James Hogg’s Fiction with
Reference to its Employment in German Romantic Literature.” [GGI:
0932].
BENEDICT,
Williston R.. “A Story Replete with Horror.” [GGII:
0587].
BLOEDÉ, Barbara R. “James
Hogg’s Private Memoirs and Confessions of a
Justified Sinner: The Genesis of the Double.” [GGI:
0933].
BLONDEL,
Jacques. “James Hogg
(1770-1835)”
(pp. 137-38). In A Handbook to
English Romanticism, eds. Jean Raimond and J.R.
Watson.
BREWSTER,
Scott. "Borderline Experience: Madness, Mimicry, and Scottish Gothic." Gothic Studies 7 (2005): 79-86.
CAMPBELL, Ian. “Hogg’s Confessions
and The Heart of
Darkness.” [GGI: 0935].
CAREY, John. “Introduction.” To The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a
Justified Sinner. [GGI: 0936].
CHIANESE, Robert L. “James Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner: An
Anatomy of Terror.” [GGI: 0937].
DUNCAN,
Ian. “The Upright Corpse: James Hogg,
National Literature, and the Uncanny.” Studies
in Hogg and His World 5 (1994): 29-54.
EGGENSCHWILER,
David. “James Hogg’s
Confessions and the Fall into Division.”
[GGI: 0938].
FAFLAK, Joe. "The
clearest light of reason;'
Making Sense of Hogg's Body of Evidence." Gothic Studies 5 (2003):
94-110.
GARSIDE, Peter. “Hogg’s Confessions
and Scot-land.” Studies
in Hogg and His World 12 (2001): 118-38. On themes of national
identity in
the novel.
GIDE, André. “Introduction.”
To The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a
Justified Sinner. [GGI: 0940].
GIFFORD, Douglas. Introduction to The Three Perils of Man: War, Woman, and
Witchcraft. [GGII: 0589].
GROVES, David. “James Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner: New
Information.” [GGII: 0590].
GROVES,
David. “John Burell and
James Hogg’s Confessions.” Notes and
Queries 49:1 (2002): 44-46.
GROVES, David.
“'Confessions of an English
Glutton:' A (Probable) Source for James Hogg's Confessions.” Notes &
Queries 40:1 (1993): 46-47.
HARRIES, Elizabeth. “Duplication
and
Duplicity: James Hogg’s Private Memoirs and
Confessions of a Justified Sinner. [GGI:
0941].
HASLER, Antony. “Introduction” (pp. i-xlii). To The Three Perils of Woman; or Love, Leasing, and Jealousy: A Series of Domestic Scottish Tales. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1995.
HEINRITZ, Reinhard and Reinhard MERGENTHAL. ”Hogg, Hoffmann, and Their Diabolical Elixirs.” Studies in Hogg and His World 7 (1996): 47-58. Compares Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner with Hoffmann’s Die Elixiere des Teufels [The Devils Elixirs].HUNTER, Adrian. “Introduction” (pp. 5-37). To The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, 2001.
JACKSON, Richard D. “The Devil, the Doppelgänger, and the Confessions of James Hogg and Thomas De Quincey.” Studies in Hogg and His World 12 (2001): 90-103.JONGS, Douglas. “Double Jeopardy
and
Chameleon Art in James Hogg’s Justified
Sinner.” [GGII: 0591].
KEARNS, Michael S. “Intuition and
Narration
in James Hogg’s Confessions.” [GGI:
0943].
LEE, L.L. “The Devil’s Figure:
James Hogg’s Justified Sinner.” [GGI:
0944].
MACK, Donald S. “Hogg’s Religion
and The Confessions of a Justified Sinner.”
[GGI: 0945].
MACK, Douglas S. ”Aspects of the Supernatural in the Shorter Fiction of James Hogg” (pp. 129-35). In Exhibited by Candlelight: Sources and Developments in the Gothic Tradition, eds. Valeria Tinkler-Villani and Peter Davidson. Amsterdam : Rodopi, 1995.
MACK, Douglas S. “The Body in the Opened Grave: Robert Burns and Robert Wringham.” Studies in Hogg and His World 7 (1996): 70-79. Raises the possibility that the stubbornly preserved body in the open grave is a metaphor of Hogg’s conflicted relationship with his predecessor as “Scotch bard.”MACK, Douglas S. “Hogg, James (1770-1835” (pp. 122-23). In The Handbook to Gothic Literature, ed. Marie Mulvey-Roberts. New York: New York University Press, 1998.
MACK, Douglas S. “Revisiting The Private Memoirs and Confes-sions of a Justified Sinner.” Studies in Hogg and His World 10 (1999): 84-91.MASON, Michael York. “The Three
Burials in
Hogg’s Justified Sinner.” [GGI: 0947].
POPE, Rebecca A. “Hogg, Wordsworth,
and
Gothic Autobiography.” Studies in
Scottish Literature 27 (1992): 218-40.
REDEKOP,
Magdalene Falk. “The Narrative Art of James Hogg.” [GGI:
0948].
REDEKOP, Magdalene Falk. “Beyond
Closure: Buried Alive with
Hogg’s Justified Sinner.” [GGII:
0592].
RIESE, Teut. “James Hogg und der
roman der englischen
romantik.” [GGI: 0949].
ROGERS, Philip. “‘A Name Which May
Serve Your
Turn’: James Hogg’s Gilmartin.” [GGII:
0593].
SEDGWICK, Eve Kosofsky. “Murder
Incorporated:
Confessions of a Justified Sinner.”
In Between Men: English Literature and
Male Homosexual Desire. [GGII:
0594].
SIMPSON, Louis Ashton Marantz. James Hogg: A Critical Study. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1962.
SMITH, Nelson C. James Hogg. [GGI: 0950].SMITH,
Nelson C.. “James Hogg” In Supernatural Fiction Writers.
[GGII:
0595].
SMYTH, Edmund J. “Gide’s Reading of
Hogg.” [GGII: 0596].
STABLEFORD, Brian. “HOGG, James” (pp. 275-76). In St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost and Gothic Writers, ed. David Pringle. Detroit and New York: St. James Press, 1998: 275-76.
THOMSON, Douglass H. “James Hogg” (pp. 185-94). In Gothic Writers: A Critical and Bibliographical Guide, eds. Douglass H. Thomson, Jack G. Voller and Frederick S. Frank. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.