Washington Irving
(1783-1859)

 IRVING PORTRAIT

Internet Resources: Jack Voller's Literary Gothic

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ANTHONY, David. "'Gone Distracted': 'Sleepy Hollow,' Gothic Masculinity and the Panic of 1819." Early American Literature 40 (2005): 111-44.

BELL, Michael Davitt. “Strange Stories: Irving’s Gothic.” In The Development of American Romance: The Sacrifice of Relation. [GGII: 0919].

CLENDENNING, John. “Irving and the Gothic Tradition.” [GGI: 1512]. 

GETZ, John R. “Irving’s ‘Dolph Heyliger Ghost Story or Tall Tale?” [GGII: 0920]. 

GRIFFITH, Kelly Jr. “Ambiguity and Gloom in Irving’s ‘Adventure of the German Student.’” [GGII: 0921]. 

LLOYD SMITH, Alan. “Irving, Washington (1783-1859)” (pp. 138-39). In The Handbook to Gothic Literature, ed. Marie Mulvey-Roberts. New York: New York  University Press, 1998.

LUPACK, Barbara Tepa. “Irving’s German Student.” [GGII: 0923]. 

LYNCH, James J. “The Devil in the Writings of Irv-ing, Hawthorne, and Poe.” [GGI: 1513]. 

MASIELLO, Lea. “Speaking of Ghosts: Style in Washington Irving’s ‘Tales of the Supernatural.’” [GGII: 0924]. 

REICHART, Walter A. Washington Irving and Germany. [GGI: 1514]. 

RINGE, Donald A. “Irving’s Use of the Gothic Mode.” [GGI: 1515]. 

THOMPSON, G.R. “Washington Irving and the American Ghost Story.” In The Haunted Dusk: American Supernatural Fiction, 1820-1920. [GGII: 0925]. 

VEEDER, William. “Form, Psychoanalysis, and Gender in Gothic Fiction: The Instance of ‘Rip Van Winkle’” (pp. 79-94). In Gothick Origins and Innovations, eds. Victor Sage and Allan Lloyd Smith. Amsterdam; Atlanta, GA: Rodopi; Costerus New Series 91, 1994.

VOLLER, Jack G. “Washington Irving” (195-201). In Gothic Writers: A Critical and Bibliographical Guide, eds. Douglass H. Thomson, Jack G. Voller, and Frederick S. Frank. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2002.

WAGENKNECHT, Edward. “Introduction.” To Washington Irving’s Tales of the Supernatural. [GGII: 0926].