Charlotte Smith (1749-1806)

BARTOLOMEO, Joseph E. “Subversion of Romance in The Old Manor House.” Studies in English Literature 33 (1993): 645-657. [GGII: 0305].

BLANK, Antje. "Things as They Were: the Gothic of Real Life in Charlotte Smith's 'The Emigrants' and The Banished Man." Women's Writing 16.1 (May 2009): 78-93.

BOWSTEAD, Diana. “Convention and Innovation in Charlotte Smith’s Novels.” Dissertation Abstracts International 39 (1979): 426A-4265A (City University of New york). [GGI: 0511].

BURGESS, Miranda J. “Charlotte Smith, The Old Manor House.” A Companion to Romanticism. Ed. Duncan Wu. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1998. 122-30. [GGIII: 1244]

CONWAY, A. “Nationalism, Revolution and the Female Body: Charlotte Smith’s Desmond.” Women’s Studies 24-25 (1995): 395-409. [GGIII: 1245]

DOLAN, Elizabeth A. "Collaborative Motherhood: Maternal Teachers and Dying Mothers in Charlotte Smith's Children's Books." Women's Writing 16.1 (May 2009): 109-125.

EHRENPREIS, Anne H. Introduction. The Old Manor House. London: Oxford UP, 1969. [GGI: 0513].

EHRENPREIS, Anne H. Introduction. Emmeline, The Orphan of the Castle. London: Oxford up, 1971. [GGI: 0515].

ELLIS, Katherine. “Charlotte Smith’s Subversive Gothic.” Feminist Studies 3 (1976): 51-55. [GGII: 0306].

FLETCHER, Loraine. “Charlotte Smith’s Emblematic Castles.” Critical Survey 4 (1992): 3-8. [GGIII: 1249]

FLETCHER, Loraine. Charlotte Smith: A Critical Bibliography. New York: Macmillan, 1998. [GGIII: 1250]

FOSTER, James R. “Charlotte Smith: Pre-Romantic Novelist.” Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 43. [GGI: 0516].

FRY, Carol. “Charlotte Smith, Popular Novelist.” Dissertation Abstracts international 31 (1970): 5360A (University of Nebraska). [GGI: 0517].

FRY, Carol. Charlotte Smith, Popular Novelist. New York: Arno Press, 1980. [GGI: 0518].

HART, Monica Smith. "Charlotte Smith's Exilic Persona." Partial Answers: Journal of Literature and the History of Ideas 8.2 (2010): 305-324.

HILBISH, Florence May Anna. Charlotte Smith, Poet and Novelist 1749-1806. Gettysburg, PA: Times and News Publishing, 1941. [GGI: 0519].

IMIG, Barbara L. “Shooting Folly as it Flies: A Dialogic Approach to Four Novels by Charlotte Smith.” Dissertation Abstracts International 52 (1991): 548A (University of Nebraska). [GG-II: 0307].

JUNG, Sandro. “Some Notes on the ’single Sentiment’ and Romanticism of Charlotte Smith.” Connotations: A Journal for Critical Debate 9 (1999-2000): 269-84. [GGIII: 1256]

KENNEDY, Deborah. “Thorns and Roses: The Sonnets of Charlotte Smith.” Women’s Writing 2:1 (1995); 43-54.  [GGIII: 1257]

KIMZEY, Donna Lee. “‘A Diagram of Raptur’: Pe-trarch, Gender, and Power in the Romantic Era (Mary Robinson, Anna Seward, Charlotte Smith, Emily Dickinson, Sappho).” Dissertation Abstracts International 57:8 (1996): 3507A (University of Virginia). [GGIII: 1258]

KRAMER, Kaley. "Women and Property in Late Eighteenth-Century Fiction: Gendered Property and and Generic Belonging in Charlotte Smith and Mary Wollstonecraft." Literature Compass 6.6 (2009): 1145-1158.

LABBE, Jacqueline. “Metaphoricity and the Romance of Property in The Old Manor House.” Novel 34 (2001): 216-31. [GGIII: 1259]

LABBE, Jacqueline. Introduction. The Old Manor House. Peterborough, ON.: Broadview Press, 2002. 1-28. [GGIII: 1260]

LIPSCOMB, David C. “Geographies of Progress: An Atlas of the Historical Novel in English, 1790-1830.” Dissertation Abstracts International 59:7 (1998): 2492A (Co-lumbia University).  [GGIII: 1261]

LOKKE, Kari. "Charlotte Smith's Desmond: the Historical Novel as Social Protest." Women's Writing 16.1 (2009): 60-77.

MC KILLOP, Alan Dugald. “Charlotte Smith’s Letters.” Huntington Library Quarterly 15 (1951): 237-55. [GGIII: 1262]

MORGAN, Rebecca. “Radical Gothic: A Study of a Literary Genre and its Purpose in the Novels of Charlotte Smith (1749-1806).” Doctoral Thesis, University of Newcastle upon Tyne , 1996. [GGIII: 1263]

NORDIUS, Janina. "'A Kind of Living Death': Gothicizing the Colonial Encounter in Charlotte Smith's The Old Manor House." English Studies 86 (2005): 40-50. [GGIV: 0000]

PARK, Susie Asha. "Compulsory Narration and the Politics of Wasted Feeling, 1784-1814." Dissertation Abstracts International 66:2 (2005): 603 (University of California, Berkeley). [GGIV: 0000]

PIORKOWSKI, Joan L. “‘Revolutionary’ Sentiment: A Reappraisal of the Fiction of Robert Bage, Charlotte Smith, and Thomas Holcroft.” Dissertation Abstracts international 41 (1980): 2127A (Temple University). [GGI: 0521].

ROGERS, Katherine M. “Inhibitions of Eighteenth Century Women Novelists: Elizabeth Inchbald and Charlotte Smith.” Eighteenth Century Studies 11 (1977): 63-78. [GGI: 0523].

ROGERS, Katherine M. “Romantic Aspirations, Restricted Possibilities: The Novels of Charlotte Smith.” Re-Visioning Romanticism: British Women Writers, 1776-1837. Eds. Carol Shiner Wilson and Joel Haefner. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1984. 72-88. [GGIII: 1266]

ROSENBLUM, Joseph. “The Treatment of Women in the Novels of Charlotte Turner Smith.” Jane Austen and Mary Shelley, and their Sisters. Ed. Laura Dabundo. Lanham, MD: University Press of America , 2000. 45-52. [GGIII: 1267]

SCHOFIELD, Mary Anne. “Charlotte Smith.” Masking and Unmasking the Female Mind: Disguising Romances in Female Fiction, 1713-1799. Newark, DE: Delaware UP, 1990. 146-174. [GGII: 0308].

SODEMAN, Melissa. "Charlotte Smith's literary Exile."ELH 76.1 (2009): 131-152.

SPENDER, Dale. “Charlotte Smith and the Real Life.” In Mothers of the Novel: 100 Good Women Writers Before Jane Austen. London and New York: Pandora Press, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1986. 217-229. [GGII: 0309].

STANTON, Judith P. “Charlotte Smith’s Prose: A Stylistic Study of Four of her Novels.” Dissertation Abstracts International 39 (1979): 6783A (University of North Carolina). [GGI: 0524].

STANTON, Judith P. “Charlotte Smith and ‘Mr. Monstroso’: An Eighteenth Century Marriage in Life and Fiction.” Women’s Writing 7:1 (2000): 7-22. [GGIII: 1271]

STOKES, Christopher. "Lorn Subjects: Haunting, Fracture and Ascesis in Charlotte Smith's Elegiac Sonnets." Women's Writing 16.1 (May 2009): 143-160.

TURNER, Rufus Paul. “Charlotte Smith (1749-1806): Some New Light on her Life and Literary Career.” Dissertation Abstracts 27 (1966): 189A (University of Southern California). [GGI: 0525].

VOLLER, Jack G. “Charlotte Turner Smith.” Gothic Writers: A Critical and Bibliographical Guide. Eds. Douglass H. Thomson, Jack G. Voller, and Frederick S. Frank. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001: 408-11. [GGIII: 1273]

WHITING, George W. “Charlotte Smith, Keats, and the Nightingale.” Keats-Shelley Journal 12 (1963): 4-8. [GGI: 0526].

WIKBORG, Eleanor. “Political Discourse Versus Sentimental Romance: Ideology and Genre in Charlotte Smith's Desmond (1792).” English Studies 78 (1997): 522-31. [GGIII: 1275]