A Bibliography of Writings About Charles Brockden Brown, 1796-2002 The starting point for this bibliography was the most comprehensive bibliography to precede it: Patricia L. Parker’s Charles Brockden Brown: A Reference Guide (Boston: G. K. Hall, 1980). In updating Parker’s work past its 1978 end point, I have primarily used the MLA electronic bibliography, although Mark Kamrath’s “Recent Charles Brockden Brown Bibliography” in Marc Amfreville and Françoise Charras, Profils Américains: Charles Brockden Brown (Montpellier: Université Paul-Valéry, 1999), 269-277, offered citations not in MLA, and the community of Brown scholars continues to do the same. For continuity I have maintained the format of Parker’s bibliography. Corrections, comments and queries are welcome: jholmes@franciscan.edu. John R. Holmes Franciscan University of Steubenville July 2003 1796.1 Anon. “An Account of a Murder Committed by J___ Y___ upon his Family, in December, A.D. 1781.” New York Weekly Magazine, 2 (20 July), 20 and (27 July), 28. 1798.1 Anon. Review of Wieland; or the Transformation. New York Commercial Advertiser (29 December), n.p. 1798.2 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation.” New York Spectator (10 November), p. 4. 1799.1 Anon. “Remarks on Wieland and Ormond.” Weekly Museum (20 June), n.p. 1800.1 Anon. “Ormond; or the Secret Witness. C. B. Brown.” Anti-Jacobin Review, 6 (August), 451. 1801.1 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation.” American Review and Literary Journal, 1 (January), 333-39. Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation.” American Review and Literary Journal. 2 (January), 23-38. 1803.1 Anon. “Arthur Mervyn; or, Memoirs of the Year1793.” Critical Review, 2 nd series 39 (September), 119. 1803.2 Davis, John. Travels of Four Years and a Half in the United States of America; during 1798, 1799, 1800, 1801, and 1802. London: F. Ostell and T. Hurst and New York: H. Caritat, pp. 122, 149-50, 163, 222. 1803.3 Miller, Samuel. A Brief Retrospect of the Eighteenth Century….Containing a Sketch of the Revolutions and Improvements in Science, Arts, and Literature During that Period. Vol. 2. New York: T. and J. Swords, p. 171. 1804.1 Anon. “Arthur Mervyn; or Memoirs of the Year 1793.” Monthly Magazine; or British Register, Supplement 16 (25 January), 635. 1804.2 Anon. “Edgar Huntley.” Critical Review, 3rd series 3 (November), 360. 1804.3 Anon. “Jane Talbot by Charles Brockden Brown.” The Imperial Review; or London and Dublin Literary Journal, 3 (November), 392-401. 1804.4 Anon. “Jane Talbot by Charles Brockden Brown.” The Literary Journal, 3 (May), 492. 1804.5 Anon. “Literary Intelligence for the Port Folio.” Port Folio, 4 (28 April), 134. 1804.6 Anon. “London Edition of Dr. Linn’s ‘Powers of Genius.’” Port Folio, 4 (1 September), 277. 1804.7 Anon. “New Translations of Volney’s Travels in America.” Port Folio, 4 (25 August), 269. 1805.1 Anon. “Conrad’s Magazine.” Port Folio. 5 (27 April), 125. 1805.2 Anon. “Edgar Huntley; or Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker by Charles Brockden Brown.” Monthly Magazine, Supplement 18 (25 January), 594. 1807.1 Anon. “Conrad’s American Register. A Review of Domestic and Foreign Literature.” Port Folio, 2nd series 4 (31 October), 279-80. 1808.1 Anon. “Brown’s American Register.” Port Folio, 2nd series 2 (27 February), 140-41. 1809.1 Anon. “Biography.” Port Folio, 3rd series 1 (January), 21. 1809.2 Anon. “Perambulator, No. III.” Rambler’s Magazine, 1 (1809), 149-62. 1809.3 Anon. [No title.] Paulson’s American Daily Advertiser. (27 February), n.p. 1810.1 Anon. “Stanzas. Commemorative of the late Charles Brockden Brown, of Philadelphia, author of Wieland, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, etc.” Port Folio, 3rd series 4 (September), 287-90. 1810.2 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation by Charles Brockden Brown.” Lady’s Monthly Museum, new series (December), 338-39. 1810.3 Watterson, George. Glencarn; or The Disappointment of Youth. Alexandria, Pennsylvania: Cotton & Stewart, p. 92. 1811.1 Anon. Review of Ormond; or The Secret Witness. The Critical Review, 3rd series 22 (April), 417-31. 1811.2 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation. By C. B. Brown.” British Critic. 37 (January), 70. 1811.3 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation.” Critical Review. 3rd series 22 (February), 14463. 1811.4 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation.” Gentlemen’s Magazine, 81 (April), 364. 1811.5 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation. By C. B. Brown.” Monthly Review, 2nd series 64 (January), 96. 1811.6 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation. By C. B. Brown.” British Critic, 5 (June), 408. 1811.7 “A. R.” “Critique on the Writings of Charles B. Brown.” Port Folio, 3rd series 6 (July), 30-35. 1811.8 Mitchell, Isaac. “Preface.” The Asylum; or, Alonzo and Melissa. Vol. 1. Poughkeepsie, New York: Joseph Nelson, xix. 1814.1 [Dennie, Joseph.] “Inquiries Respecting Dennie and Brown.” Port Folio, 4th series 3 (June), 570-73. 1815.1 Dunlap, William. The Life of Charles Brockden Brown: Together with Selections from the Rarest of His Printed Works, from His Original Letters, and from His Manuscripts before Unpublished. Vols. 1 and 2. Philadelphia: James P. Parks, 396 pp. and 472 pp. 1816.1 “S.” “Dunlap’s Life of Charles Brockden Brown.” The Portico, 1 (May), 380-83. 1818.1 Godwin, William. “Preface” in Mandeville. A Tale of the Seventeeth Century in England. Vol. 1. Philadelphia: M. Thomas, p. ix. 1819.1 Anon. “The Life of Charles Brockden Brown: Together with Selections from the Rarest of His Printed Works, from His Original Letters, and from His Manuscripts before Unpublished.” North American Review, 9 (June), 58-77. Anon. “On the Writings of Charles Brockden Brown and Washington Irving.” Blackwood’s, 6 (February), 554-56. 1820.1 1820.2 Anon. “On the Writings of Charles Brockden Brown and Washington Irving.” Atheneum, 7 (April), 124-26. 1820.3 Anon. “On the Writings of Charles Brockden Brown and Washington Irving.” Literary and Scientific Repository. 1 (July), 187-90. 1820.4 Anon. “On the Writings of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist.” New Monthly Magazine, 14 (December), 609-14. Cooper, James Fenimore. “Preface.” The Spy. Vol. 1. New York: Wiley and Halstead, p. v. Anon. “American Genius, Exemplified in the Life of Charles Brockden Brown.” Lady’s Magazine, new series 3 (1822), 139-142. Anon. “Brown, the American Novelist.” Kaleidoscope, new series 2 (11 June), 390. Anon. “Carwin the Biloquist. Dunlap’s Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown.” Gentleman’s Magazine, supplement 92 (1822), 622. Anon. “Carwin, the Biloquist and Other American Tales and Pieces.” Literary Chronicle, 4 (20 July), 45556. Anon. “Carwin, the Biloquist and Other American Tales.” New Monthly Magazine, 6 (1 May), 222. Anon. “Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist, Author of Wieland, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, etc. with Selections from his Original Letters and Miscellaneous Writings.” Literary Chronicle (9 March), pp. 148-50. Anon. “Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist. Author of Wieland, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, & with Selections from his Original Letters and Miscellaneous Writings.” Monthly Magazine, 54 (October), 254-55. Anon. “Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist. Author of Wieland, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, & with Selections from his Original Letters and Miscellaneous Writings.” Monthly Review, 94 (October), 151-57. Anon. “Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist. By William Dunlap.” New Monthly Magazine, 6 (1 April), 172. Anon. Review of Carwin, the Biloquist and Other American Tales and Pieces. Monthly Censor, 1 (July), 235. Anon. Review of Dunlap’s Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown. Monthly Censor, 1 (September), 399. Anon. “The Spy.” Literary Chronicle, 4 (6 July), 421. Dunlap, William. Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist. Author of Wieland, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, &, with Selections from his Original Letters and Miscellaneous Writings. London: Henry Colburn and Co., 337 pp. [Gardiner, William H.]. “The Spy, a Tale of Neutral Ground.” North American Review, 15 (July), 281. 1824.1 Anon. “Arthur Mervyn, a Tale.” Retrospective Review, 9: 317-23. 1824.2 Anon. “Carwin, the Biloquist and Other American Tales and Pieces.” European Magazine, 85 (January), 55-60. 1824.3 Anon. “Remarks on The Pioneers.” Newcastle Magazine, new series 3 (January), 35. 1824.4 Anon. “Wieland and Other Novels.” American Monthly Magazine, 1 (January), 42-58. 1824.5 [Neal, John]. “American Writers I and II.” Blackwood’s. 16 (October), 305-11 and 42126. 1824.6 Wheaton, Henry. An Address, Pronounced at the Opening of the New-York Athenaeum, December 14. New York: C. Wiley, p. 8. 1825.1 Anon. “Dunlap’s Memoirs of Charles Brockden Brown.” Blackwood’s, 18 (September), 327-28. 1826.1 Anon. “Wieland, Edgar Huntley, Philip Stanley, Jane Talbot, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, and Logan, a Family History.” British Critic, 3rd series 2 (April), 53-78. 1827.1 Anon. “Memoir of Charles Brockden Brown,” in The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown: Wieland, Ormond, Arthur Mervyn, Edgar Huntley, Clara Howard, Jane Talbot. 6 vols. Boston: S.G. Goodrich, pp. iii-xxiv. 1827.2 Anon. “The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Western Monthly Review, 1 (December), 483-94. 1827.3 Anon. “The Red Rover.” Literary Gazette, II (8 December), 787. 1827.4 Dana, Richard Henry, Sr. “ The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” United States Review, 2 (August), 321-33. 1827.5 [Hill, Fred S.]. “Review.” Boston Lyceum, 1 (June), 324. 1828.1 Cooper, James Fenimore. Notions of the Americans: Picked up by a Traveling Bachelor, Vol. 2. Philadelphia: Carey, Lea and Carey, p. 111. 1828.2 [Mellen, G.]. “The Red Rover.” North American Review, 27 (July), 144. 1829.1 [Everett, A.H.] “Irving’s Life of Columbus.” North American Review, 28 (January), 108. 1829.2 [Hazlitt, William]. “William Ellery Channing’s Sermons and Tracts.” Edinburgh Review, 50 (October), 126-28. 1829.3 Knapp, Samuel Lorenzo. Lectures on American Literature with Remarks on Some Passages of American History. New York: Elam Bliss, pp. 132, 138, and 175. 1829.4 [Smith, Richard Penn]. “Progress of Literature in Pennsylvania.” The Philadelphia Monthly Magazine, new series 1: 599-605. 1830.1 Anon. “Brown’s Novels.” American Quarterly Review, 8 (December), 312-37. 1831.1 Anon. “Edgar Huntley; or The Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker, by Charles Brockden Brown.” Athenaeum, 4 (December), 785. 1832.1 Dunlap, William. History of the American Theatre. New York: J. & J. Harper, pp. 16870, passim. 1833.1 Anon. “Works of Mrs. Child.” North American Review, 37 (July), 139. 1834.1 Anon. “Sparks’s American Biography. The Library of American Biography.” North American Review, 38 (April), 474-78. 1834.2 Dunlap, William. “Charles Brockden Brown,” in National Portrait Gallery of Distinguished Americans. Edited by James Herring and James B. Longacre. Vol. 3. New York: M. Bancroft, pp. 1-8. 1834.3 [Palfrey, J.G.] “Periodical Literature of the United States. The Republic of Letters; being a weekly Republication of Works of Standard Literature.” North American Review, 39 (October), 277-301. 1834.4 Prescott, William H. “Life of Charles Brockden Brown,” in Library of American Biography. Edited by Jared Sparks. Vol. 1. Boston: Hilliard Gray & Co., pp. 117-80. 1835.1 Anon. “Charles Brockden Brown.” Albany Bouquet: and Literary Spectator. (2 May), p. 15. 1835.2 Anon. “Charles Brockden Brown.” Literary Gazette (Concord, New Hampshire), 2 (23 January), 137-38. 1835.3 Anon. “Letters on the United States of America.” Southern Literary Messenger, 1 (May), 481-83. 1835.4 Paulding, James Kirke. “National Literature,” in Salmagundi. Vol. 2. New York: Harper & Brothers, pp. 271-72. 1835.5 [Willis, N.P.]. “Literature of the Nineteenth Century: America.” Athenaeum, n.v. (3 January), pp. 9-13. 1836.1 “E.M.V.D.” “The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Ladies’ Companion, 4 (January), 135. 1842.1 Anon. “Modern Fiction.” Southern Literary Messenger, 8 (May), 342-48. 1843.1 Poe, Edgar Allan. “Review of Wyandotte.” Graham’s Magazine, (November), p. 261. 1844.1 Poe, Edgar Allan. “Marginalia.” United States Magazine and Democratic Review, new series 15 (December), 585. 1845.1 Lippard, George. “Dedication” in Quaker City; or, The Monks of Monk-Hall. Philadelphia: T.B. Peterson and Brothers, n.p. 1845.2 Poe, Edgar Allan. “Simms.” Broadway Journal, 2 (4 October), 190. 1846.1 Anon. “Announcement of Complete Works of Charles Brockden Brown to Be Published by William Taylor & Co.” New York Illustrated Magazine of Literature and Art, 2 (May), 64. Fuller, Margaret. “American Literature: Its Position in the Present Time, and Prospects for the Future,” in Papers on Literature and Art, Part II. New York: Wiley and Putnam, pp. 146-50. 1846.2 1846.3 Fuller, Margaret. “Charles Brockden Brown.” New York Tribune, (21 July), n.p. 1846.4 Hawthorne, Nathaniel. “P’s Correspondence” and “The Hall of Fantasy,” in Mosses from an Old Manse. New York: Wiley and Putnam, pp. 131-32 and 161, respectively. 1847.1 Griswold, Rufus Wilmot. The Prose Writers of America. Philadelphia: Carey and Hart, pp. 107-11. 1848.1 Barrett, Joseph Hartwell. “Charles Brockden Brown.” American Whig Review, new series 1 (March), 260-74. 1848.2 Lippard, George. “The Heart-Broken.” The Nineteenth Century, A Quarterly Miscellany, 1 (January), 19-27. 1848.3 Noble, Charles. Studies in American Literature. A Textbook for Academics and High Schools. New York: The Macmillan Co., 1848, pp. 75-80. 1850.1 Dana, Richard Henry, Sr. “Charles Brockden Brown” in Poems and Prose Writings. Vol. 2. New York: Baker and Scribner, pp. 325-43. 1853.1 Tuckerman, Henry T. Mental Portraits. London: Richard Bentley, 1853, pp. 271-86. 1854.1 Allibone, S. Austin. Allibone’s Critical Dictionary of English Literature and British and American Authors Living and Deceased from the Earliest Accounts to the Latter Half of the Nineteenth Century. Vol. 1. Philadelphia: Childs & Peterson, p. 256. 1854.2 Anon. “The Book Trade.” Norton’s Literary Gazette, new series 1 (1 April), 165. 1855.1 Duyckinck, Evert and George L. Duyckinck. Cyclopedia of American Literature: Embracing Personal and Critical Notices of Authors and Selections from their Writings. From the Earliest Period to the Present Day. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner, pp. 586-91. 1856.1 Gostwick, Joseph. Hand-Book of American Literature. Historical, Biographical, and Critical. Series on Literary America in the Nineteenth Century. London and Edinburgh: W. and R. Chambers. 1856.2 Hood, Thomas. “The Fall” in The Poetical Works. Vol. 2. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., p. 47. 1857.1 Anon. “Arthur Mervyn.” Graham’s Magazine, 50 (May), 468. 1857.2 Anon. “A Biographical and Critical Memoir of Charles Brockden Brown,” in The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown. Vol. 1. Philadelphia: M. Polock. 1857.3 Anon. “Edgar Huntley; or Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker by Charles Brockden Brown.” Graham’s Magazine, 50 (June), 564. 1857.4 Anon. “Jane Talbot by Charles Brockden Brown.” Graham’s Magazine, 50 (July), 86. 1857.5 Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation. Charles Brockden Brown.” American Notes and Queries, 1 (February), 76. Anon. “Wieland; or the Transformation by Charles Brockden Brown.” Graham’s Magazine, 50 (March), 277. 1857.6 1857.7 Goodrich, S.G. Recollection of a Lifetime, or Men and Things I Have Seen. In a Series of Familiar Letters to a Friend, Historical, Biographical, Anecdotal, and Descriptive. Vol. 2. New York: Miller, Orton, and Mulligan, pp. 203-204. 1857.8 Tuckerman, Henry T. “The Supernaturalist. Charles Brockden Brown,” in Essays, Biographical and Critical, or Studies of Character. Boston: Phillips, Sampson and Co., pp. 369-78. 1858.1 Anon. “The Works of Edgar Allan Poe.” Edinburgh Review, 52 (April), 419-22. 1858.2 Francis, John Wakefield. Old New York; or, Reminiscence of the Past Sixty Years. Being an Enlarged and Revised Edition of the Anniversary Discourse Delivered before the New York Historical Society (November 17, 1857). New York: C. Roe, pp. 69, 290. 1859.1 Cleveland, Charles D. A Compendium of American Literature, Chronologically Arranged; with Biographical Sketches of the Authors, and Selections from their Works. Second edition. Philadelphia: E.C. & J. Biddle, pp. 172-78. 1862.1 Irving, Pierre. Life and Letters of Washington Irving. Vol. 1. New York: G.P. Putnam, pp. 47 and 184. 1865.1 [Lippard, George]. “The First American Novelist.” The Foederal American Monthly, 51 (July), 46-53. 1866.1 Whittier, John Greenleaf. “Fanaticism” in Prose Works of John Greenleaf Whittier. Vol. 2. Boston: Ticknor and Fields, pp. 94-99. 1868.1 Anon. “The Pioneer of American Fiction.” The Dartmouth, 2 (February), 41-44. 1869.1 Fuller, Margaret. “American Literature: Its Position in the Present Time, and Prospects for the Future,” in Art, Literature, and the Drama, Part II. New York: Tribune Association, pp. 322-326. 1873.1 Hart, John Seely. A Manual of American Literature. Series in American Studies, edited by Joseph K. Kwiat. Philadelphia: Eldredge & Brother, p. 111. 1875.1 Prescott, William H. “Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist,” in Biographical and Critical Miscellanies. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., pp. 1-52. 1876.1 Jenkins, Oliver L. The Student’s Handbook of British and American Literature Containing Sketches Biographical and Critical of the Most Distinguished Authors from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. Baltimore: John Murphy & Co., pp. 455-57. 1876.2 Lathrop, G.P. “Early American Novelists.” Atlantic Monthly, 37 (April), 405-407. 1876.3 Whipple, Edwin P. “A Century of American Literature” in The First Century of the Republic: A Review of American Progress by Theodore D. Woolsey, et al. New York: Harper and Brothers, p. 358. 1878.1 Beers, Henry Augustin. A Century of American Literature, 1776-1876. New York: H. Holt and Co., pp. 36-50. 1878.2 Smith, George Barnett. “Brockden Brown.” Fortnightly Review, new series 24 (September), 399-421. 1879.1 Tuckerman, Henry. “A Sketch of American Literature” in A Complete Manual of English Literature by Thomas B. Shaw. New York: Sheldon and Co., pp. 505-506. 1880.1 Lamb, Martha J. History of the City of New York: Its Origin, Rise and Progress. Vol. 2. New York and Chicago: A.S. Barnes and Co., pp. 468, 519, 527, 554. 1881.1 Warner, Charles D. Washington Irving. Boston: Houghton Mifflin and Co., pp. 10-16. 1882.1 Nichol, John. American Literature. An Historical Sketch 1620-1880. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black, pp. 157-62. 1882.2 Scherr, Johannes. A History of English Literature. Translasted by M.V. London: Sampson, Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, p. 307. 1883.1 Morse, James Herbert. “The Native Element in American Fiction.” Century 26: 229-98. 1884.1 Scharf, J. Thomas and Thompson Westcott. History of Philadelphia 1609-1884. Vols. 2 and 3. Philadelphia: L.H. Everts & Co., pp. 1133 (Vol. 2) and 1981 (Vol. 3). 1886.1 Alden, John. Alden’s Cyclopedia of Universal Literature. Vol. 3. New York: By the Author, pp. 159-63. 1886.2 Dowden, Edward. Life of Shelley. Vol. 1. London: Kegan Paul, Trench & Co., pp. 47273. 1887.1 Anon. “A Biographical and Critical Memoir of Charles Brockden Brown,” in Complete Edition of the Novels of C.B. Brown. Vol. 1. Philadelphia: David McKay, pp. 1-52. 1887.2 Anon. “Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” The Critic, 8 (24 December), 325-26. 1887.3 Anon. “Charles Brockden Brown.” Appleton’s Cyclopedia of American Biography. Edited by James Grant Wilson and John Fiske. Vol. 1. New York: D. Appleton and Co., p. 397. 1887.4 Anon. “Notes.” The Critic, new series 8 (5 November), 236. 1887.5 Beers, Henry A. An Outline Sketch of American Literature. New York: Chautauqua Press, pp. 79-82. 1887.6 Bernard, John. Retrospections of America 1797-1811. New York: Harper & Co., pp. 190, 250-55. 1887.7 Prescott, William H. “Memoir of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist,” in Complete Edition of the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown. Vol. 3. Philadelphia: David McKay. 1887.8 Whipple, Edwin Piercy. American Literature and Other Papers. Boston: Ticknor & Co., p. 28. 1888.1 [Woodberry, George E.]. “Charles Brockden Brown.” Atlantic Monthly, 61 (May), 71014. 1889.1 Adams, Henry. History of the United States of America during the First Administration of Thomas Jefferson. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, p. 123. 1889.2 Anon. “American Fiction.” Edinburgh Review, n.v.: 515-53. 1890.1 Phillips, Ervin Louis. “The Earliest American Novelist.” Cornell Magazine, 2 (February), 200-204. 1891.01 Beers, Henry A. Initial Studies in American Letters. The Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle. Studies for 1891-92. New York: Chautauqua Press, pp. 62-65. 1891.1 Beers, Henry A. Studies in American Letters. Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs & Co. 1891.2 Hawthorne, Julian and Leonard Lemmon. American Literature. An Elementary TextBook. Boston: D.C. Heath & Co., pp. 23-25. 1892.1 Smyth, Albert H. The Philadelphia Magazines and Their Contributors, 1741-1850. Philadelphia: R.M. Lindsay, pp. 79-80, 152-70. 1892.2 Van Pelt, Daniel. “The Closing Years of the Eighteenth Century, 1793-1800,” in Memorial History of the City of New York. From Its First Settlement to the Year 1892. Edited by James G. Wilson. New York: New York History Co., p. 144. 1892.3 Wilson, James Grant. “The Knickerbocker Authors,” in Memorial History of the City of New York. From Its First Settlement to the Year 1892. Edited by the Author. New York: New York History Co., pp. 76-77. 1893.1 Anon. “Wieland; or The Transformation.” Critic, 22 (14 January), 20. 1893.1.1 Bates, Katharine Lee. American Literature. New York: Macmillan Co., pp. 88-90. 1893.2 Richardson, Charles F. American Literature 1607-1885. Vol. 2. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, pp. 262-63, 286-89. 1893.3 Stone, Herbert Stuart. First Editions of American Authors. A Manual for Book-lovers. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Stone & Kimball, p. 23. 1894.1 Boyesen, Hjalmar Hjorth. Literary and Social Silhouettes. New York: Harper & Brothers, p. 59. 1894.2 Lippard, George. “The Heart-Broken.” Hesperian, 1 (November-January), 99-106. 1895.1 McCowan, John S. “Our First Novelist.” Sewanee Review 4: 174-80. 1896.1 Pattee, Fred Lewis. A History of American Literature. New York: Silver, Burdett and Co., pp. 103-105. 1896.2 Richardson, Charles F. A Primer of American Literature. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., p. 23. 1897.1 Foley, Patrick Kevin. American Authors 1795-1895. Boston: By the Author, pp. 27-28. 1897.2 Mitchell, Donald Grant. American Lands and Letters. Vol. 1. The Mayflower to Rip VanWinkle. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 179-83. 1898.1 Anon. “Charles Brockden Brown.” Appleton’s Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Edited by James Grant Wilson and John Fiske. Revised edition. Vol. 1. New York: D. Appleton and Co., p. 397. 1898.2 Hawthorne, Julian, et al., eds. The Literature of All Nations and Ages. Vol. 9. New York: The Hamilton Book Co., pp. 50-51. 1898.3 Herringshaw, Thomas William. Herringshaw’s Encyclopedia of American Biography of the Nineteenth Century. Chicago: American Publiushers Association, p. 156. 1898.4 Higginson, Thomas Wentworth. “Charles Brockden Brown.” American Prose Selections with Critical Introductions by Various Writers and a General Introduction. Edited by George Rice Carpenter. London and New York: Macmillan, pp. 84-88. 1898.5 Pancoast, Henry S. An Introduction to American Literature. New York: Henry Holt and Co., pp. 108-111. 1898.6 Seilhammer, George O. “Weekly Newspapers and Magazines” in Memorial History of the City of Philadelphia. Edited by John Russell Young. Vol. 2. New York: New York History Co., p. 273. 1899.01 Fisher, Mary. A General Study of American Literature. Chicago: A.C. McClurg, pp. 1718. 1899.1 Wilkens, Frederic H. “Early Influences of German Literature in America.” Americana Germanica, 3: 137-39. 1900.1 Carpenter, George R. “American Literature” in English Literature by Stopford A. Brooke. New York and London: Macmillan, p. 291. 1900.2 Wendell, Barrett. A Literary History of America. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 157-68. 1901.1 Bronson, Walter C. A Short History of American Literature. Boston: D.C. Heath & Co., pp. 94-101. 1901.2 King, Moses. Philadelphia and Notable Philadelphians. New York: By the author, p. 4. 1901.3 Moulton, Charles Wells. Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors. Vol. 4: 1785-1824. Buffalo, New York: Moulton Publishing Co., pp. 552-58. 1901.4 Newcomber, Alphonso G. American Literature. Chicago: Scott, Foresman and Co., pp. 55-61. 1902.1 Abernathy, Julian Willis. American Literature. New York: Maynard, Merrill and Co., pp. 99-103. 1902.2 Garnett, Richard. “Alms for Oblivion. The Minor Writings of Charles Brockden Brown.” Cornhill Magazine, new series 13: 494-506. 1902.3 Hawthorne, Julian, et al., eds. The Masterpiece and the History of Literature. New York: DuMont, 1902. 1902.4 Lawton, William Cranston. Introduction to the Study of American Literature. New York and Chicago: Globe School Book Co., pp. 65-66. 1902.5 Pattee, Fred Lewis. “Introduction” in The Poems of Philip Freneau: Poet of the American Revolution. Vol. 1. Princeton: Princeton University Press, p. cx. 1902.6 Poe, Edgar Allan. The Complete Works. Edited by James A. Harrison. Vols. 11 and 16. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., pp. 206 and 41, respectively. 1902.7 Sears, Lorenzo. American Literature in the Colonial and National Periods. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., p. 169. 1903.1 Burton, Richard. Literary Leaders of America. A Classbook on American Literature. New York: Chautauqua Press, pp. 10-11. 1903.2 Helmstreet, Charles. Literary New York. New York: G.P. Putnam. 1903.3 Higginson, Thomas Wentworth and Henry Walcott Boynton. A Reader’s History of American Literature. Boston: Houghton Mifflin and Co., pp. 69-78. 1903.4 Pattee, Fred Lewis. A History of American Literature. Revised edition. New York: Silver, Burdett and Co., pp. 103-105. 1903.5 Peacock, Thomas Love. Gryll Grange in Novels of Thomas Love Peacock. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, p. 945. 1903.6 Trent, William Peterfield. A History of American Literature, 1607-1865. New York: D. Appleton, pp. 206-12. 1903.7 Woodberry, George Edward. America in Literature. New York and London: Harper & Brothers, pp. 36-38. 1904.1 Chambers, Robert. Chambers’ Encyclopaedia of English Literature. Edited by David Patrick. Vol. 3. London: W. & R. Chambers, p. 740. 1904.2 More, Paul Elmer. “The Origins of Hawthorne and Poe” in Shelburne Essays on American Literature. First series. Vol. 1. Boston and New York: Houghton-Mifflin Co., pp. 67-68. 1904.3 Vilas, Martin Samuel. Charles Brockden Brown. A Study of Early American Fiction. Burlington, Vermont: Free Press Association, 66 pp. 1905.1 Wharton, Anne Hollingsworth. “Philadelphia in Literature.” Critic, 47 (September), 22431. 1906.1 Anon. “Burial Place of Charles Brockden Brown. The First American Novelist.” PMHB, 30: 242-43. 1906.2 Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxton. Literary History of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: George W. Jacobs & Co., pp. 147, 157-60. 1907.1 Anon. “Chronicle and Comment.” Bookman, 25 (March), 3-5. 1907.2 [Edgett, Edwin F.] “Writers and Books.” Boston Evening Transcript (16 February), p. 5. 1907.3 Loshe, Lillie Deming. The Early American Novel. New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 37-50, 69-73. 1907.4 Marble, Annie. Heralds of American Literature. A Group of Patriot Writers of the Revolutionary and National Periods. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 278, 282318. 1907.5 Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxton. “The First American Novelist.” Journal of American History, 1 (1907), 236-40. 1909.1 Higginson, Thomas Wentworth. Carlyle’s Laugh and Other Surprises. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., pp. 55-64. 1909.2 Peacock, Thomas Love. Memoirs of Shelley. Edited by H.F.B. Brett-Smith. London: Henry Frowde, pp. 35-36. 1909.3 Simonds, William Edward. A Student’s History of American Literature. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., pp. 87-89. 1909.4 Stanton, Theodore, ed. A Manual of American Literature. New York and London: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, pp. 117-120. 1910.1 Blake, Warren Barton. “A Novelist of Plague Days,” New York Evening Post (19 March), p. 2. 1910.2 Blake, Warren Barton. “Brockden Brown and the Novel.” SR, 18 (October), 431-43. 1910.3 Blake, Warren Barton. “Fiction and the Yellow Fever.” Boston Evening Transcript (26 February), p. 4. 1910.4 Erskine, John. “Charles Brockden Brown” in Leading American Novelists. New York: Henry Holt and Co. 1910.4.1 Hale, Edward Everett, Jr. “American Scenery in Cooper’s Novels.” Sewanee Review, 18: 326-27. 1910.5 Just, Walter. Die Romantische Bewegung in der Amerikanischen Literatur: Brown, Poe, Hawthorne. Berlin: Mayer & Muller, 93 pp. 1910.6 Marble, Annie Russell. “The Centenary of America’s First Novelist.” Dial, 48 (16 February), 109-10. 1910.7 Quinn, Arthur Hobson. “Some Phases of the Supernatural in American Literature.” PMLA, 25: 114-33. 1911.1 Anon. “Charles Brockden Brown.” Chautauqua, 64 (September), 99-102. 1911.2 Bates, Katharine Lee. American Literature. New York: The Macmillan Co., pp. 88-90. 1911.3 Fricke, Max. Charles Brockden Brown’s Leben und Werke. Hamburg: Otto Meissners Verlag, 95 pp. 1911.4 Halleck, Reuben Post. History of American Literature. New American Book Co., pp. 8992. 1912.1 L. Matthew Carey. Editor, Author, and Publisher. A Study in American Literary Development. New York: Columbia University Press, p. 9. 1912.2 Cairns, William B. A History of American Literature. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 151-53. 1912.3 Trent, William Peterfield and John Erskine. Great American Writers. New York: Henry Holt & Co., pp. 12-20. 1912.4 Van Doren, Carl. The American Novel. New York: The MacMillan Co., pp. 10-15. 1914.1 Metcalf, John Calvin. American Literature. Atlanta, Richmond and Dallas: B.F. Johnson Publishing Co., pp. 98-99. 1914.2 Van Doren, Carl. “Early American Realism.” Nation, 99 (12 November), 577-78. Ellis, Harold Milton. “Joseph Dennie and His Circle. 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Putnam’s Sons, pp. 35-39. 1917.4 Van Doren, Carl. “Charles Brockden Brown.” in The Cambridge History of American Literature. Vol. 1: Colonial and Revolutionary Literature. Early National Literature. Edited by William Peterfield Trent, et al. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, pp. 287-92. 1918.1 Anon. “The American Pioneer of the New Psychic Romance.” Current Opinion, 64 (April), 278. 1918.2 Cairns, William B. British Criticisms of American Writings 1783-1815. A Contribution to the Study of Anglo-American Literary Relationships. University of Wisconsin Studies in Language and Literature, no. 1. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, pp. 192-200. 1919.1 Boynton, Percy H. A History of American Literature. Boston: Ginn and Co., pp. 100-109. 1920.1 Birkhead, Edith. The Tale of Terror. New York: E.P. Dutton. 1921.1 [Edgett, Edwin F.] “Writers and Books.” Boston Evening Transcript (6 July), p. 7. 1921.2 Woodberry, George Howard. “Charles Brockden Brown,” in Literary Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century. New York: Harcourt Brace, pp. 275-82. 1922.1 Clark, David Lee. ”Brockden Brown and the Rights of Women.” University of Texas Bulletin, No. 2212 (22 March), pp. 1-48. 1923.1 Clark, David Lee. “Charles Brockden Brown: A Critical Biography.” Ph. D. Dissertation, Columbia University. 1923.2 Clark, David Lee. Charles Brockden Brown: A Critical Biography. New York: Columbia University Press, 49 pp. 1923.3 Haney, John Louis. The Story of Our Literature. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 55-56. 1925.1 Corad, Oral Sumner. “The Gothic Element in American Literature before 1825.” JEGP, 24: 72-93. 1925.2 [Edgett, Edwin F.] “Fiction We Remember.” Boston Evening Transcript (16 May), p.6. 1925.3 Lang, Wilbert Jason. “Charles Brockden Brown.” Typescript. Houghton Library, Harvard University, 23 pp. 1925.4 Violette, Augusta Genevieve. “Economic Feminism in American Literature Prior to 1848.” Maine Bulletin. University of Maine Studies, 2nd series 27 (February), pp. 38-50. 1926.1 Pattee, Fred Lewis. “Introduction,” in Wieland or the Transformation Together with Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist. A Fragment by Charles Brockden Brown. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., pp. ix-xlvi. 1926.2 Williams, Stanley Thomas. The American Spirit in Letters. New York: United States Publishers Association, pp. 92-93. 1927.1 Adkins, Nelson. “A Study of James K. Paulding’s Westward Ho!” The American Collector, 3 (March), 221-29. 1927.2 Clark, David Lee. “Brockden Brown’s First Attempt at Journalism.” University of Texas Studies in English, No. 7 (15 November), 155-74. 1927.3 McDowell, Tremaine. “Sensibility in the Eighteenth Century American Novel.” SP, 24 (July), 382-402. 1927.4 Parrington, Vernon Louis. Main Currents of American Thought. Vol. 2: The Romantic Revolution in America. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., pp. 188-90. 1927.5 Railo, Eino. The Haunted Castle. A Study of the Elements of English Romanticism. New York: E.P. Dutton and Co., pp. 300-302. 1928.1 Bailey, Marcia. “A Lesser Hatford Wit: Dr. Elihu Hubbard Smith 1771-1798.” Maine Bulletin. University of Maine Studies, 2nd series 30 (June), 1-150, passim. 1928.2 Cairns, William B. “British Republication of American Writings, 1783-1833.” PMLA, 43 (March), 303-310. 1928.3 Clark, David Lee. “Introduction” in Edgar Huntley by Charles Brockden Brown. 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New York and London: Oxford University Press, pp. 151-53. 1930.2 Hazlitt, William. “Conversations with Northcote,” in Complete Works. Vols. 11 and 16. London: Dent and Co., pp. 240 and 318- 20, respectively. 1930.3 McDowell, Tremaine. “Scott on Cooper and Brockden Brown.” MLN, 45 (January), 1820. 1930.4 Mott, Frank Luther. A History of American Magazines, 1741-1850. New York: D. Appleton and Co., pp. 218-22. 1930.5 Prescott, F.C. “Wieland and Frankenstein.” AL, 11 (May), 172-73. 1930.6 Sickels, Eleanor. “Shelley and Charles Brockden Brown.” PMLA, 45 (December), 111628. 1931.1 Angoff, Charles. A Literary History of the American People. Vol. 2: From 1750 to 1815. New York: Alfred Knopf and Co., pp. 319-25. 1931.2 Blankenship, Russell. American Literature as an Expression of the National Mind. New York: Henry Holt, pp. 241-42. 1931.3 Marble, Annie. Builders and Books. The Romance of American History and Literature. New York and London: D. Appleton and Co., pp. 93-94. 1931.4 Parma, V. 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Bowker Co., p. 44. 1932.7 Knight, Grant Cochran. American Literature and Culture. New York: Ray Long and Richard R. Smith, Inc., pp. 100-102. 1932.8 Lewisohn, Ludwig. Expression in America. New York: Harper and Brothers, p. 54. 1933.1 Keiser, Albert. The Indian in American Literature. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 33-37. 1933.2 Miller, Leon. American First Editions. Their Points and Prices. n.p.; The Westport Press, p. 17. 1933.3 Scott, Eleanor Bryce. “Early Literary Clubs in New York City.” AL, 5 (March), 3-16. 1933.4 Singer, Godfrey Frank. The Epistolary Novel. Its Origin, Development, Decline, and Residuary Influence. Philadephia: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 197-98. 1934.1 Baker, Ernest Albert. The History of the English Novel. Vol. 5: The Novel of Sentiment and the Gothic Romance. London: H.F. and G. Witherby, pp. 211-17. 1934.2 Dunlap, George Arthur. The City in the American Novel 1787-1900. Philadelphia: By the Author, pp. 12-13, 43-44, 66-67. 1934.3 Goodman, Nathan G. Benjamin Rush, Physician and Citizen. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, p. 184. 1934.4 Halleck, Reuen Post. The Romance of American Literature. New York: American Book Co., pp. 66-67. 1934.5 Kimball, LeRoy Elwood. “An Account of Hocquet Caritat, XVIII Century New York Circulating Librarian, Bookseller, and Publisher of the first Two Novels of Charles Brockden Brown, ‘America’s First Man of Letters.’” Colophon, Part 18 (September), n.p. (12 pp.) 1934.6 Marchand, Ernest. “The Literary Opinions of Charles Brockden Brown.” SP, 31 (October), 541-66. 1935.1 Benson, Mary Sumner. Women in Eighteenth-Century America. A Study of Opinion and Social Usage. New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 172-75, 198-201. 1935.2 Kimball, LeRoy Elwood. “Introduction,” in Alcuin; a Dialogue. New Haven: Carl & Margaret Rollins, pp. vii-xxi. 1935.3 Moulton, Charles Wells. The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors. Vol. 4. New York: P. Smith, pp. 552-58. 1935.4 Pattee, Fred Lewis. The First Century of American Literature 1770-1870. New York: D. Appleton-Century Co., pp. 96-106. 1935.5 Stearns, Bertha Monica. “A Speculation Concerning Charles Brockden Brown.” PMHB, 59 (April), 99-105. 1935.6 Winterich, John Tracey. Early American Books and Printing. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., pp. 154, 155, 178, and 227. 1936.1 Boynton, Percy H. Literature and American Life for Students of American Literature. Boston: Ginn and Co., pp. 198-203. 1936.2 Charvat, William. The Origins of American Critical Thought, 1810-1835. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 141, 144-45, 153, 159. 1936.3 Flory, Claude Reherd. Economic Criticism in American Fiction, 1792 to 1900. Philadelphia: By the Author, pp. 156-57, 199. (A Ph. D. Dissertation from the University of Pennsylvania.) 1936.4 Hendrickson, James C. “A Note on Wieland.” AL, 8 (November), 305-306. 1936.5 Lesiy, Ernest E. “The Novel in America. Notes for a Survey.” SWR, 22 (Autumn), 89. 1936.6 Quinn, Arthur Hobson. American Fiction. An Historical and Critical Survey. New York: Appleton-Century Crofts, Inc., pp. 25-39. 1936.7 Taylor, Walter Fuller. A History of American Letters. New York: American Book Co., pp. 67-70. 1937.1 Marchand, Ernest. “Introduction,” in Ormond; or The Secret Witness by Charles Brockden Brown. New York: American Book Co., pp. ix-xliv. 1937.2 Neal, John. American Writers. A Series of Papers Contributed to Blackwood’s Magazine (1824-1825). Durham: Duke University Press, pp. 56-68. 1937.3 Orians, G. Harrison. “Censure of Fiction in American Romances and Magazines 17981810.” PMLA, 52 (March), 209. 1938.1 Kunitz, Stanley J. and Howard Haycraft. American Authors 1600-1900. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., pp. 104-106. 1938.2 Summers, Montague. The Gothic Quest. A History of the Gothic Novel. London: Fortune Press, pp. 121, 151. 1938.3 Thompson, Lawrance. Young Longfellow (1807-1843). New York: Macmillan Co., pp. 44-45. 1939.1 Blakey, Dorothy. The Minerva Press 1790-1820. London: Bibliographical Society at the Oxford University Press, pp. 196, 206, 211, 224. 1939.2 Haney, John Louis. The Story of our Literature. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 55-56. 1939.3 Jackson, Joseph. Literary Landmarks of Philadelphia. Philadelphia: David McKay Co., pp. 37, 41-44. 1939.4 Redden, Sr. Mary M. The Gothic Fiction in the American Magazines (1765-1800). Washington, D.C.: Catholic University Press, pp. 45-47, 57. 1939.5 Smith, Bernard. Forces in American Criticism. A Study in the History of American Literary Thought. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., pp. 14-16, 17-18, 20. 1939.6 Wright, Lyle H. American Fiction 1774-1850. A Contribution toward a Bibliography. San Marino, California: Huntington Library, pp. 31-32. 1940.1 Black, Frank Gees. The Epistolary Novel in the Eighteenth Century. A Descriptive and Bibliographical Study. University of Oregon Monographs, Studies in Literature and Philology, No. 2. Eugene: University of Oregon Press, pp. 54, 70, 71, 74, 109, 110. 1940.1.1 Brown, Herbert Ross. The Sentimental Novel in American 1789-1860. Durham: Duke University Press, pp. 11, 36, 54, 56, 60, 61, 116, 159-62. 1940.2 Hintz, Howard W. The Quaker Influence in American Literature. New York: Fleming H. Revell, pp. 34-40. 1940.3 Power, Julia. “Shelley in America in the Nineteenth Century. His Relation to American Critical Thought and Influence.” Nebraska University Studies, 40: 3-4. 1940.4 Raddin, George Gates. An Early New York Library of Fiction with a Checklist of the Fiction in H. Caritat’s Circulating Library No. 1 City Hotel, Broadway, New York 1804. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., p. 76. 1940.5 Randall, Randolph C. “Authors of the Port Folio Revealed by the Hall Files.” AL, 11 (January), 379-416. 1940.6 Van Doren, Carl. The American Novel. Revised edition. New York: Macmillan Co., pp. 11-15. 1940.7 Warfel, Harry R. “Charles Brockden Brown’s German Sources.” MLQ, 1 (September), 357-65. 1941.1 Doyle, Mildred Davis. “Sentimentalism in American Periodicals, 1741-1800.” Ph. D. Dissertation, New York University, pp. 103-15. 1941.2 Fuller, Margaret. Writings. Edited by Mason Wade. New York: Viking Press, pp. 377-80. 1941.3 Matthiessen, F.O. The American Renaissance. Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 201-202. 1941.4 Warfel, Harry R. “Charles Brockden Brown’s First Published Poem.” AN&Q, 1 (April), 19-20. 1942.1 Gerould, Gordon Hall. The Patterns of English and American Fiction. A History. Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., pp. 186-87. 1942.2 Rourke, Constance. The Roots of American Culture and Other Essays. New York: Harcourt Brace and Co., pp. 10, 81, 100, 101. 1943.1 Burke, W.J., Will D. Howe, and Irving R. Weiss. American Authors and Books, 1640 to the Present. New York: Gramercy Publishing Co., p. 97. 1943.2 Stovall, Floyd. American Idealism. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, pp. 23-29. 1943.3 Wagenknecht, Edward. Cavalcade of the American Novel. From the Birth of the Nation to the Middle of the Twentieth Century. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, pp. 9-13. 1943.4 Warfel, Harry R. “Introduction,” in The Rhapsodist and Other Collected Writings. New York: Scholars’ Facsimiles and Reprints, pp. v-xii. 1944.1 Anon. “Supplement to the Guide to the Manuscript Collections in the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.” PMHB, 68 (January), 99. 1944.2 Beard, Charles A. and Mary R. Beard. A Basic History of the United States. New York: Doubleday, Doran and Co., pp. 152, 154. 1944.3 Brooks, Van Wyck. The World of Washington Irving. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., pp. 17-26 and passim. 1944.4 Haviland, Thomas P. “Precosité Crosses the Atlantic.” PMLA, 59 (March), 131-41. 1944.5 Kraus, Michael. “Literary Relations between Europe and America in the Eighteenth Century.” WMQ, 1 (July), 225-26. 1944.6 Peden, William. “Thomas Jefferson and Charles Brockden Brown.” Maryland Quarterly, 1: 65-68. 1944.7 Snell, George. “Charles Brockden Brown: Apocalypticalist.” University of Kansas City Review, 11 (Winter), 131-38. 1945.1 Paine, Gregory. “American Literature a Hundred and Fifty Years Ago.” SP, 42 (July), 390. 1946.1 Morris, Mabel. “Charles Brockden Brown and the American Indian.” AL, 18 (November), 244-47. Shelley, Mary. Journal. Edited by Frederick L. Jones. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, pp. 26, 27, 29, 33, 47, 83, 89, 219. Snell, George. The Shapers of American Fiction 1798-1947. New York: E.P. Dutton and Co., pp. 32-45. Clark, David Lee. “Unpublished Letters of Charles Brockden Brown and W.W. Wilkins.” Texas University Studies in English, 27 (June), 75-107. Cole, Charles C., Jr. “Brockden Brown and the Jefferson Administration.” PMHB, 72 (July), 253-63. Cowie, Alexander. “The Beginnings of Fiction and Drama,” in Literary History of the United States. Edited by Robert E. Spiller et al. Vol. 1. New York: The Macmillan Co., pp. 181-84. Cowie, Alexander. The Rise of the American Novel. New York: American Book Co., pp. 69-104. Cronin, James E. “Elihu Hubbard Smith and the New York Friendly Club, 1795-1798.” PMLA, 64 (June), 475-78. Powell, J.H. Bring Out Your Dead. The Great Plague of Yellow Fever in Philadelphia in 1793. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 300, 304. Warfel, Harry R. Charles Brockden Brown. American Gothic Novelist. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 237 pp. Frank, John G. “The Wieland Family in Charles Brockden Brown’s ‘Wieland.’” Monatschefte, 42 (November), 347-53. Hart, James D. The Popular Book. A History of America’s Literary Taste. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 59, 65. Wiley, Lulu Rumsey. The Sources and Influences of the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown. New York: Vantage Press, 363 pp. Wish, Harvey. Society and Thought in Early America: a Social and Intellectual History of the American People through 1865. New York: David McKay, p. 300. Dowden, Edward. The Life of Shelley. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. Quinn, Arthur Hobson. “Early Fiction and Drama” in The Literature of the American People. An Historical and Critical Survey. Edited by Arthur Hobson Quinn. New York: Appleton-CenturyCrofts, Inc., pp. 193-97. 1952.1 Clark, David Lee. Charles Brockden Brown. Pioneer Voice of America. Durham: Duke University Press, 363 pp. 1953.1 Carter, Boyd. “Poe’s Debt to Charles Brockden Brown.” PrS, 27 (Summer), 190-96. 1953.2 Pearce, Roy Harvey. The Savages of America: A Study of the Indian and the Idea of Civilization. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, pp. 198-99. 1953.3 Raddin, George Gates, Jr. Hocquet Caritat and the Early New York Literary Scene. Dover, New Jersey: Dover Advance Press, pp. 50-60. 1953.4 Warfel, Harry. Footnotes to Charles Brockden Brown: American Gothic Novelist. Gainesville, Florida: no publisher. 1954.1 Berthoff, Warner B. “The Literary Career of Charles Brockden Brown.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Harvard University, 345 pp. 1954.2 Tilton, Eleanor M. “The Sorrows of Charles Brockden Brown.” PMLA, 69 (December), 1304-1308. 1955.1 Blanck, Jacob. Bibliography of American Literature. Vol. 1. New Haven: Yale University Press, pp. 302-309. 1955.2 Lewis, R.W.B. The American Adam: Innocence, Tragedy, and Tradition in the Nineteenth Century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 90-109. 1956.1 Berthoff, Warner B. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Historical ‘Sketches.’ A Consideration.” AL, 28 (May), 149-54. 1956.2 Hart, James D. The Oxford Companion to American Literature. 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Knopf, Inc., pp. 21-22, 137. 1958.4 Loshe, Lillie Deming. The Early American Novel 1789-1830. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co. 1958.5 Pattee, Fred Lewis. “Introduction,” in Wieland or the Transformation Together with Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist. A Fragment by Charles Brockden Brown. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., pp. ix-xlvi. 1958.6 Preu, James A. “The Tale of Terror.” EJ, 47 (May), 243. 1958.7 Riese, Teut. “Das Englische Erbe in der Amerikanischen Literatur: Studien zur Entstehungsgeschicte des amerikanischen Selbstbewusstseins im Zeitalter Washingtons und Jeffersons.” BEPh, No. 39. 1958.8 Varma, Devendra. The Gothic Flame, Being a History of the Gothic Novel in England: its Origins, Efflorescence, Disintegration, and Residuary Influences. London: Arthur Baker, Ltd., pp. 139, 203. 1959.1 Martin, Harold C. “The Development of Style in 19 th Century American Fiction,” in Style in Prose Fiction. English Institute Essays. Edited by H.C. Martin. New York: Columbia University Press, p. 126. 1960.1 Fiedler, Leslie. Love and Death in the American Novel. New York: Criterion Books, pp. 73-80, 129-48. 1960.2 Howard, Leon. Literature and the American Tradition. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Co., pp. 80-81. 1960.3 Jones, Joseph, et al. American Literary Manuscripts. A Checklist of Holdings in Academic, Historical and Public Libraries in the United States. Compiled and published under the auspices of the American Literature Group of the Modern Language Association. Austin: University of Texas Press, pp. 51-52. 1960.4 Nye, Russell B. The Cultural Life of the New Nation, 1776-1830. The New American Nation Series. Edited by Henry Steele Commager and Richard B. Morris. New York: Harper & Row, p. 244. 1960.5 Pattee, Fred Lewis. “Introduction,” in Wieland; or the Transformation Together with Carwin the Biloquist. A Fragment by Charles Brockden Brown. New York: Hafner Publishing Co., Harcourt Brace and Co., pp. ix-xlvi. 1961.1 Coyle, James John. “The Problem of Evil in the Major Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts, 21: 3780. 1961.2 Gerstenberger, Donna and George Hendrick. The American Novel 1789-1959. A Checklist of Twentieth-Century Criticism. Denver: Alan Swallow, pp. 30-32. 1961.3 Knapp, Samuel Lorenzo. Lectures on American Literature with Remarks on Some Passages of American History. Gainesville, Florida: Scholars’ Facsimiles & Reprints. 1961.4 McSwain, David C., Jr. “The Dramatic Idea.” Unpublished Honors Thesis. Harvard College, 47 pp. 1961.5 Prescott, William H. The Literary Memoranda of W.H. Prescott. Edited by C. Harvey Gardiner. Vol. 1. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, pp. 163-64. 1961.5.1 Spiller, Robert E. “New Wine in Old Bottles,” in The Great Experiment. Edited by Carl Bode. London: Heinemann. 1961.6 Weber, Alfred. “Essays and Rezensionen von Charles Brockden Brown.” Jahrbuch Fur Amerikastudien, 6: 168-330. 1962.1 Bernard, Kenneth. “The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown: Studies in Meaning.” Dissertation Abstracts, 23: 1008. 1962.2 Berthoff, Warner. “Introduction,” Arthur Mervyn; or Memoirs of the Year 1793. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, pp. vii-xxiv. 1962.3 Herzberg, Max J. and the staff of the Thomas Y. Crowell Co. “Charles Brockden Brown,” in The Reader’s Encyclopedia of American Literature. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., pp. 114-15. 1962.4 Marchand, Ernest. “Introduction,” in Ormond; or the Secret Witness. New York: Hafner Publishing Co., Harcourt Brace and Co., pp. ix-xliv. 1962.5 Wiley, Elizabeth. “Four Strange Cases.” Dickensian, 58 (May), 120-25. 1962.6 Ziff, Larzer. “A Reading of Wieland.” PMLA, 77 (March), 51-57. 1963.01 Abel, Darrel. American Literature. Volume 1: Colonial and Early National Writing. Woodbury, New York: Barron’s Educational Series, pp. 294-313. 1963.1 Birkhead, Edith. The Tale of Terror. New York: Russell and Russell, pp. 197-200. 1963.2 Cooper, James Fenimore. Notions of the Americans: Picked up by a Travelling Bachelor. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., p. 111. 1963.3 Dunlap, William. History of the American Theatre. 3 vols. New York: Burt Franklin, passim. 1963.4 Fuller, Margaret. “Charles Brockden Brown” and “American Literature. Its Position in the Present Time and Prospects for the Future,” in Margaret Fuller. American Romantic. A Selection from her Writings and Correspondence. Edited by Perry Miller. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, pp. 223-26, 249-50. 1963.5 Holt, Charles Clinton. “Short Fiction in American Periodicals: 1775-1825.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Auburn University, pp. 103-14. 1963.6 Manly, William M. “The Importance of Point of View in Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” AL, 35 (November), 311-21. 1963.7 More, Paul Elmer. “The Origins of Hawthorne and Poe,” in Shelburne’s Essays on American Literature. Edited by Daniel Aaron. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, p. 97. 1963.8 Prescott, William H. “Memoir of Charles Brockden Brown, the American Novelist,” in Charles Brockden Brown’s Novels. Vol. 3. Port Washington, New York: Kennikat Press, pp. 1-52. 1963.9 Weber, Alfred. “Eine neu entdeckte Kurzgeschichte C.B. Browns.” Jarbuch fur Amerikastudien, 8: 280-96. 1964.1 Bernard, Kenneth. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Sublime.” Person, 45 (April), 23549. 1964.2 Bulgheroni, Marisa. “Charles Brockden Brown Tra il Romanzo e la Storia.” SA, 10: 5769. 1964.3 Craft, Harvey Milton. “The Opposition of the Merchanistic and Organic Thought in the Major Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts, 25: 5926. 1964.4 Davis, Richard Beale. Intellectual Life in Jefferson’s Virginia 1790-1830. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, pp. 78, 114. 1964.5 Davies, Rosemary Reeves. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond: A Possible Influence upon Shelley’s Conduct.” PQ, 43 (January), 133-37. 1964.6 Hayne, Barrie Stewart. “The Rhapsodist: Charles Brockden Brown,” in “The Divided Self: The Alter Ego as Theme and Device in Charles Brockden Brown, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry James.” Ph. D. Dissertation, Harvard University, pp. 71-151. 1964.7 Railo, Eino. The Haunted Castle. A Study of the Elements of English Romanticism. New York: Humanities Press, pp. 300-302. 1964.8 Summers, Montague. The Gothic Quest. A History of the Gothic Novel. New York: Russell and Russell. 1964.9 Witherington, Paul. “Narrative Technique in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts, 25: 2992. Bernard, Kenneth. “Arthur Mervyn: The Ordeal of Innocence.” TSLL, 6 (Winter), 441-59. Bulgheroni, Marisa. La Tentazione della Chimera. Charles Brockden Brown e le Origin de Romanzo Americano. Bibliotec di Studi Americani. Roma: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 273 pp. Flanders, Jane Townsend. “Charles Brockden Brown amd William Godwin: Parallels and Divergences.” Dissertation Abstracts, 26: 3334. Hirsch, David H. “Charles Brockden Brown as a Novelist of Ideas.” BBr, 20: 165-84. Hough, Robert L. Literary Criticism of Edgar Allan Poe. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, pp. 13031. Kimball, Arthur G. “Rational Fictions: A Study of Charles Brockden Brown.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Claremont Graduate School, 259 pp. Levine, Paul. “The American Novel Begins.” ASch, 35 (Winter), 134-48. Martin, John Stephen. “Social and Intellectual Patterns in the Thought of Cadwallader Colden, Benjamin Thompson (Count Rumford), Thomas Cooper, Fisher Ames, Timothy Dwight, David Humphreys, Benjamin Silliman, and Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts, 26: 3343. Spiller, Robert E. “New Wine in Old Bottles,” in The Third Dimension: Studies in Literary History. New York: Macmillan Co., pp. 85-87. Aldridge, Alfred Owen. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Poem on Benjamin Franklin.” AL, 38 (May), 230-35. 1966.1 Berthoff, Warner. “Brockden Brown: The Politics of the Man of Letters.” The Serif. Kent State University Library Quarterly, 3 (December), 3-11. 1966.2 Clark, David Lee. Charles Brockden Brown. Pioneer Voice of America. New York: AMS Press, Inc., 363 pp. 1966.3 Fiedler, Leslie. Love and Death in the American Novel. Revised edition. New York: Stein and Day, pp. 98-104, 142-61. 1966.4 Franklin, H. Bruce. Future Perfect. American Science Fiction of the Nineteenth Century. New York: Oxford University Press, p. x. 1966.5 Garrow, Scott. “Character Transformation in Wieland.” SoQ, 4 (April), 308-18. 1966.6 Gorlier, Claudio. “Due Classici Dissepoliti: Wieland e Clarel.” Approdo, 12: 125-31. 1966.7 Hemenway, Robert E. and Dean H. Keller. “Charles Brockden Brown, America’s First Important Novelist: A Check List of Biography and Criticism .” Bibliographical Society of America. Papers, 60 (July-September), 349-63. 1966.8 Hemenway, Robert. “Daniel Edwards Kennedy’s Manuscript Biography of Charles Brockden Brown.” The Serif. Kent State University Library Quarterly, 3 (December), 1618. 1966.9 Krause, Sydney J. and Jane Nieset. “A Census of the Works of Charles Brockden Brown.” The Serif. Kent State University Library Quarterly, 3 (December), 27-55. 1966.10 Mott, Frank Luther. A History of American Magazine, 1741-1850. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. 1966.11 Ricks, Christopher. “Chamber of Horrors.” The New Statesman (11 March), pp. 339-40. 1966.12 Ringe, Donald. Charles Brockden Brown. Twayne’s United States Authors Series, No. 98. New York: Twayne Publishers, 158 pp. 1966.13 Shapiro, Morton. “Sentimentalism in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts, 27: 1384A. 1966.14 Stoddard, Roger E. “Daniel Edwards Kennedy, a Forgotten Collector of Charles Brockden Brown and Early American Literature.” The Serif. Kent State University Library Quarterly, 3 (December), 11-16. 1966.15 Witherington, Paul. “Image and Idea in Wieland and Edgar Huntley.” The Serif. Kent State University Library Quarterly, 3 (December), 19-26. 1967.1 Antenor [Bacon, Donald Davis]. “Duché, Crevocoeur, and Brown.” Helen Choate Bell Prize Essay. Harvard University, 47 pp. 1967.2 Bernard, Kenneth. “Edgar Huntley: Charles Brockden Brown’s Unsolved Murder.” LC, 33: 30-53. 1967.3 Harvey, Sir Paul. The Oxford Companion to English Literature. 4th edition revised. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 116-17. 1967.4 Hemenway, Robert E. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Law Study: Some New Documents.” AL, 39 (May), 199-204. 1967.5 Hemenway, Robert E. “The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown: A Critical Study.” Dissertation Abstracts, 28: 676A. 1967.6 Kimball, Arthur G. “Savages and Savagism: Brockden Brown’s Dramatic Irony.” SIR, 6 (Summer), 214-25. 1967.7 Kirkham, E. Bruce. “A Note on Wieland.” AN&Q, 5 (February), 86-87. 1967.8 Lasser, Michael L. “Elihu Smith’s All-American Anthology.” JRUL, 31:15. 1967.9 Pease, Marilyn Theresa. “The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown: Studies in the Rise of Consciousness.” Dissertation Abstracts, 28: 64140A. 1967.10 Paulding, James Kirke. “National Literature,” in American Literary Revolution. Edited by Robert E. Spiller. New York: New York University Press, p. 386. 1968.1 Charvat, William. Origins of American Critical Thought, 1810-1835. New York: Russell & Russell. 1968.1.1 Charvat, William. The Profession of Authorship in America. Edited by Matthew Bruccoli. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, pp. 24-28. 1968.2 Christadler, Martin. “Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810)—Essay, Erzählung und Artikel,” in Der Amerikanische Essay 1720-1820. Heidelburg: Carl Winter: Universitatsverlag, pp. 223-37. 1968.3 Erskine, John. “Charles Brockden Brown” in Leading American Novelists. Freeport, New York: Books for Libraries Press, pp. 3-49. 1968.4 Frank, Frederick Stilson. “Perverse Pilgrimage: The Role of the Gothic in the Works of Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Allan Poe, and Nathaniel Hawthorne.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Rutgers University, pp. 163-288. 1968.5 Free, William J. The Columbian Magazine and American Literary Nationalism. The Hague and Paris: Mouton, pp. 35, 99-100, 123. 1968.6 Grove, James Leland. “Visions and Revisions: A Study of the Obtuse Narrator in American Fiction from Brockden Brown to Faulkner.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Harvard University, pp. 10-115. 1968.7 Hare, Robert Rigby. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond; The Influence of Rousseau, Godwin, and Mary Wollstonecraft.” Ph. D. Dissertation, University of Maryland, 324 pp. 1968.8 Hemenway, Robert E. “Brockden Brown’s Twice Told Insanity Tale.” AL, 40 (May), 211-15. 1968.9 Hemenway, Robert E. “Fiction in the Age of Jefferson: the Early American Novel as Intellectual Document.” Midcontinent American Studies Journal, 9 (Spring), 91-102. 1968.10 Hilton, William C. “The Triumph of the Conservative Unconscious in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts, 29: 230A. 1968.11 Kettler, Robert Ronald. “The Eighteenth Century Novel: The Beginning of a Fictional Tradition.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Purdue University, 200 pp., passim. 1968.12 Kimball, Arthur G. Rational Fictions. A Study of Charles Brockden Brown. McMinnville, Oregon: Linfield Research Institute, 238 pp. 1968.13 Krause, Sidney J. “Charles Brockden Brown.” CEAAN, 1: 13-14. 1968.14 Redekop, Ernest. “The Redmen: Some Representations of Indians in American Literature before the Civil War.” Canadian Association of American Studies Bulletin, 3 (Winter), 69. 1968.15 Strozier, Robert. “Wieland and Other Romances: Horror in Parenthesis.” ESQ, 50 (First Quarter), 24-29. 1968.16 Wager, Willis. American Literature. A World View. New York: New York University Press, pp. 53-56, 60, 129. 1969.1 Anon. “Life of Charles Brockden Brown by William Dunlap,” in American Romanticism. A Shape for Fiction. Comp. by Stanley Bank. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, pp. 53-58. 1969.2 Bernard, John. Retrospections of America 1797-1811. New York and London: Benjamin Bloom, pp. 190, 250-55. 1969.3 Black, Frank Gees. The Epistolary Novel in the Late Eighteenth Century. Darby, Pennsylvania: Darby Books, pp. 54, 70, 71, 74, 109, 110. 1969.4 Greiner, Donald J. “Brown’s Use of the Narrator in Wieland: An Indirect Plea for the Acceptance of Fiction.” CLAJ, 13 (December), 131-36. 1969.5 Hart, John Seely. A Manual of American Literature. Series in American Studies, edited by Joseph J. Kwiat. New York: Johnson Reprint Corporation, p. 111. 1969.6 Longtin, Ray C. “Charles Brockden Brown,” in The Critical Temper; a Survey of Modern Criticism on English and American Literature. From the Beginning to the Twentieth Century. General Editor, Martin Tucker. Vol. 3. New York: Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., pp. 238-43. 1969.7 Mulqueen, James E. “The Plea for a Deistic Education in Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” BSUF, 10 (Spring), 70-77. 1969.8 Oberholtzer, Ellis Paxton. Literary History of Philadelphia. New York: Gale Research Co., pp. 147, 157-60. 1969.9 Thompson, Lawrance. Young Longfellow (1807-1848). New York: Octagon Books, pp. 44-45. 1969.10 Ullmer, R. John. “The Quaker Influence in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts, 30: 1577A-78A. 1969.11 Van Der Beets, Richard and Paul Witherington. “My Kinsman, Brockden Brown: Robin Molineux and Arthur Mervyn.” ATQ, 1: 13-15. 1969.12 Woodberry, George Edward. “Charles Brockden Brown,” in Literary Memoirs of the Nineteenth Century. Port Washington, New York: Kennikat Press, pp. 275-82. 1969.13 Wright, Lyle H. American Fiction, 1774-1805. A Contribution towards a Bibliography. Second revised edition. San Marino, California: Huntington Library, pp. 59-60. 1970.1 Bennett, Charles E. “Charles Brockden Brown’s ‘Portrait of an Immigrant’.” CLAJ, 14 (September), 87-90. 1970.2 Bernard, Kenneth. “Charles Brockden Brown,” in Minor American Novelists. Edited by Charles A. Hoyt. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, pp. 1-9. 1970.3 Brancaccio, Patrick. “Studied Ambiguity: Arthur Mervyn and the Problem of the Unreliable Narrator.” AL, 42 (March), 18-27. 1970.4 Burton, Richard. Literary Leaders of America. A Class Book in American Literature. Freeport, New York: Books for Libraries Press, pp. 10-11. 1970.5 Edwards, Lee R. “Afterword,” in Alcuin: A Dialogue by Charles Brockden Brown. New York: Grossman Publishers, pp. 92-104. 1970.6 Gerstenberger, Donna and George Hedrick. The American Novel. A Checklist of Twentieth Century Criticism on Novels Written Since 1789. Vol. 2: Criticism Written 1960-1968. Chicago: The Swallow Press, Inc., pp. 30-32. 1970.7 Hintz, Howard W. The Quaker Influence in American Literature. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. 1970.8 Justus, James H. “Arthur Mervyn, American.” AL, 42 (November), 304-24. 1970.9 Kable, William S. “Introduction,” in Three Early American Novels. Columbus, Ohio: Charles E. Merrill Co., pp. 8-14. 1970.10 Miller, Samuel. A Brief Retrospect of the 18th Century…Containing a Sketch of the Revolutions and Improvements in Science, Art, and Literature during that Period. Vol. 2. New York: Lenox Hall. 1970.11 Nye, Russell B. American Literary History: 1607-1830. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., pp. 55, 185-86, 193, 209, 213, 218, 238, 241-44. 1970.12 Peacock, Thomas Love. Memoirs of Shelley and Other Essays and Reviews. Edited by Howard Mills. New York: New York University Press, pp. 42-43. 1970.13 Prescott, William H. “A Biographical and Critical Memoir of Charles Brockden Brown,” in Charles Brockden Brown’s Novels. New York: Burt Franklin. 1970.14 Pridgeon, Charles Taylor, Jr. “Insanity in American Fiction from Charles Brockden Brown to Oliver Wendell Holmes.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 31: 1766A67A. 1970.15 Rainer, Jacob. “Charles Brockden Browns Romantheorie.” Zulassungsarbeit zur Wissenschaftlichen Prufung fur das Lehramt an Gymnasien. Manuskript. Tubingen. 1970.16 Richardson, Charles F. American Literature 1607-1885. Vol. 2. Brooklyn: Haskell House Publisher, Inc. 1970.17 Schulz, Max F. “Brockden Brown: An Early Casualty of the American Experience,” in Americana-Austriaca: Beltrage zur Amerikakunde. Edited by Klaus Lanzinger. Band 2. Vienna: Braumuller, pp. 81-90. 1970.18 Sears, Lorenzo. American Literature in the Colonial and National Periods. New York: Burt Franklin, p. 169. 1970.19 Stone, Herbert Stuart. First Editions of American Authors. A Manual for Book-lovers. Kennebunkport, Maine: Milford House, Inc., p.23. 1971.1 Cicardo, Barbara Joan. “The Mystery of the American Eve: Alienation of the Feminine as a Tragic Theme in American Letters.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 32: 911A. 1971.2 Cleveland, Charles D. A Compendium of American Literature Chronologically Arranged; with Bibliographical Sketches of the Authors, and Selections from their Works. Port Washington, New York: Kennikat Press, p. 172. 1971.3 Fleck, Richard F. “Symbolic Landscapes in Edgar Huntley.” RS, 39 (September), 229-32. 1971.4 Francis, John W. Old New York; or, Reminiscences of the Past Sixty Years. Being an Enlarged and Revised Edition of the Anniversary Discourse Delivered before the New York Historical Society, (November 17, 1857). New York: Benjamin Bloom, Inc., pp. 69, 290. 1971.4.1 Gostwick, Joseph. Hand-Book of American Literature. Historical, Biographical, and Critical. Series on Literary America in the Nineteenth Century. Port Washington, New York: Kennikat Press, pp. 33-34. 1971.5 Hirsch, David H. “Brown: Ideas and Idealogies,” in Reality and Idea in the Early American Novel. The Hague: Mouton, pp. 74-100. 1971.6 Katz, Joseph. “Analytical Bibliography and Literary History; The Writing and Printing of Wieland.” Proof, 1: 18-34. 1971.7 Lyttle, David. “The Case Against Carwin.” NCF, 26 (December), 257-69. 1971.8 Nelson, Carl W., Jr. “The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown: Irony and Illusion.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 32: 392A. 1971.9 Petter, Henri. The Early American Novel. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, pp. 174-77, 192-96, 333-60. 1971.10 Schneider, Evelyn Sears. “I. Glories and Glow-Worms: A Study of the Juxtaposition of Opposites in Three Plays by John Webster. II. The Changing Image of Charles Brockden Brown as Seen by American Critics from 1815 to the Present. III. Action, Motion, and Being: The Techniques of Kinesis in the Poems of E.E. Cummings.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Rutgers University, pp. 70-140. 1971.11 Schulz, Dieter. “Edgar Huntley as Quest Romance.” AL, 43 (November), 323-35. 1971.12 Tricomi, Elizabeth Taylor. “The Search for Knowledge in the Major Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 31: 5430A. 1971.13 Ward, William S. “Charles Brockden Brown, his Contemporary British Reviewers, and Two Minor Bibliographical Problems.” PBSA, 65 (Fourth Quarter), 399-402. 1971.14 Wyss, Hal Huntington. “Involuntary Evil in the Fiction of Brown, Cooper, Poe, Hawthorne, and Melville.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 32: 1489A. 1972.1 Cunningham, Judith Ann. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Pursuit of a Realistic Feminism: A Study of his Writings as a Contribution to the Growth of Women’s Rights in America.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 32: 4558A. 1972.2 Harap, Louis. “Fracture of a Stereotype: Charles Brockden Brown’s Achsa Fielding.” American Jewish Archives, 24 (November), 187-95. 1972.3 Howard, Leon. Literature and the American Tradition. New York: Gordian Press, pp. 8081. 1972.4 Hume, Robert D. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Use of Gothicism: A Reassessment.” ESQ, 18 (First Quarter), 10-18. 1972.5 Ringe, Donald A. “Charles Brockden Brown,” in Major Writers of American Literature. Edited by Everett Emerson. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, pp. 273-94. 1972.6 Rose, Alan Henry. “Sin and the City: The Uses of Disorder in the Urban Novel.” CentR, 16 (Summer), 204-207. 1972.7 Soldati, Joseph Arthur. “Configurations of Faust: Three Studies in the Gothic (17981820).” Dissertation Abstracts International, 32: 6945A. 1972.8 Tebbel, John. A History of Book Publishing in the United States. Vol. 1: The Creation of an Industry 1630-1865. New York and London: R.R. Bowker, pp. 106, 385, 538, 133. 1972.9 Tichi, Cecilia. “Charles Brockden Brown, Translator.” AL, 44 (March), 1-12. 1972.10 Warner, Stephen Douglas. “Representative Studies in the American Picaresque: Investigation of Modern Chivalry, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and The Adventures of Augie March.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 32: 4582A. 1972.11 Weber, Alfred. “Charles Brockden Browns Theorie der Geschichtsschreibung und des Romans,” in Geschichte und Fiktion. Amerikanische Prose im 19. Jahrundert. Edited by Alfred Weber and Hartmut Grandel. Gottingen: Vandenhoek und Ruprecht, pp. 15-34. 1972.12 Witherington, Paul. “Benevolence and the ‘Utmost Stretch’ Charles Brockden Brown’s Narrative Dilemma.” Criticism, 14 (Spring), 175-91. 1973.1 Brooks, Cleanth, W.B. Lewis, and Robert Penn Warren. American Literature. The Makers and the Making. Vol. 1. New York: St. Martin’s Press, p. 226. 1973.2 Brown, Herbert. “Charles Brockden Brown’s ‘The Story of Julius’: Rousseau and Richardson ‘Improved,”” in Essays Mostly in Periodical Publishing in America. A Collection in Honor of Clarence Gohdes. Edited by James Woodress. Durham: Duke University Press, pp. 35-38. 1973.3 Calverton, V.F. The Liberation of American Literature. New York: Octagon Books, Farrar Straus and Giroux. 1973.4 Davidson, Marshall B. and the editors of American Heritage. The American Heritage History of the Writers’ America. New York: American Heritage Publishing Co., McGraw Hill, p. 76. 1973.5 Green, Martin. “The God that Neglected to Come: American Literature 1780-1820,” in American Literature to 1900. Edited by Marcus Cunliffe. London: Barrie & Jenkins, pp. 93-95. 1973.6 Hedges, William L. “Benjamin Rush, Charles Brockden Brown, and the American Plague Year.” EAL, 7 (Winter), 295-311. 1973.7 Hughes, Philip R. “Archetypal Patterns in Edgar Huntley.” SNNTS, 5: 176-90. 1973.8 Jenkins, R.B. “Invulnerable Virtue in ‘Wieland’ and ‘Comus.’” SAB, 38 (May), 72-75. 1973.9 Krause, Sydney J. “Ormond: Seduction in a New Key.” AL, 44 (January), 570-84. 1973.10 Larson, David Mitchell. “The Man of Feeling in America: A Study of Major American Writers’ Attitudes Toward Benevolent Ethics and Behavior.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 34: 2568A. 1973.11 Nelson, Carl W., JR. “A Just Reading of Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond.” EAL, 8 (Fall), 163-78. 1973.12 Rice, Nancy. “Heritage. Alcuin.” MR, 16 (Autumn), 802-14. 1973.13 Ringe, Donald. “Early American Gothic: Brown, Dana and Allston.” ATQ, 19 (Summer), 3-8. 1973.14 Rose, Harriet. “The First-Person Narrator as Artist in the Works of Charles Brockden Brown, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry James.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 33: 6373A. 1973.16 Slotkin, Richard. Regeneration through Violence. The Mythology of the American Frontier, 1600-1860. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press, pp. 382-90. 1973.17 Smith, Elihu Hubbard. Diary. Edited by James E. Cronin. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, passim. 1973.18 Stineback, David. “Introduction,” in Edgar Huntley; or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker. New Haven, Connecticut: College and University Press, pp. 7-24. 1974.1 Bell, Michael D. “‘The Double-Tongued Deceiver’: Sincerity and Duplicity in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” EAL, 9 (Fall), 143-63. 1974.2 Bennett, Charles E. “The Charles Brockden Brown Canon.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 35: 3670A. 1974.3 Butler, David Loren. “A Study of the Literary Style of the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 34: 5093A-94A. 1974.4 Davis, Elizabeth Aldrich. “The Spirit of the Letter: Richardson and the Early American Novel: A Study in the Evolution of Form.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 34: 7185-86A. 1974.5 Ernest, Earnest. The American Eve in Fact and Fiction, 1775-1914. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, pp. 31-34. 1974.6 Ferguson, Robert Alan. “Charles Brockden Brown: The Vocational Dilemma of America’s First Major Novelist,” in “The Legal Mind in Early American Literature.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Harvard University, pp. 104-214. 1974.7 Hamilton, Wynette L. “The Correlation between Societal Attitudes and Those of American Authors in the Depiction of American Indians, 1607-1860.” AIQ, 1: 9-11. 1974.8 Hedges, William L. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Culture of Contradictions.” EAL, 9 (Fall), 107-42. 1974.9 Ketterer, David. New Worlds for Old: The Apocalyptic Imagination, Science Fiction, and American Literature. Bloomington, Indiana: University of Indiana Press, pp. 167-81. 1974.10 McAlexander, Patricia Jewell. “Sexual Morality in the Fiction of Charles Brockden Brown: Index to a Personal and Cultural Debate Regarding Passion and Reason.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 34: 6597A. 1974.11 Raneri, Marietta R. “The Self Behind the Self: The Americanization of the Gothic.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 34: 5200A-5201A. 1974.12 Reid, S.W. “Brockden Brown in England: Notes on Henry Colburn’s 1822 Editions of His Novels.” EAL, 9 (Fall), 188-95. 1974.13 Rodgers, Paul C., Jr. “Brown’s Ormond: The Fruits of Improvisation.” AQ, 24 (March), 4-21. 1974.14 Sheldon, Pamela J. “American Gothicism: The Evolution of a Mode.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 35: 1634A-35A. 1974.15 Soldati, Joseph. “The Americanization of Faust: A Study of Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” ESQ, 20 (1 November), 1-14. 1974.16 Tillinghast, Charles Allen. “The Early American Novel: A Critical Revaluation.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Syracuse University, pp. 55-73, 132-161. 1974.17 Wilson, James D. “Incest and American Romantic Fiction.” SLitI, 7 (Spring), 31-50. 1974.18 Witherington, Paul. “Brockden Brown’s Other Novels: Clara Howard and Jane Talbot.” NCF, 29: 257-72. 1974.19 Witherington, Paul. “Charles Brockden Brown: A Bibliographical Essay.” EAL, 9 (Fall), 164-87. 1975.1 Alderson, Evan. “To Reconcile with Common Maxims: Edgar Huntley’s Ruses.” PCP, 10 (April), 5-9. 1975.2 Allen, Paul. The Life of Charles Brockden Brown. Delmar, New York: Scholars’ Facsimiles & Reprints, pp. 9-391. 1975.3 Barnett, Louise K. The Ignoble Savage. American Literary Racism, 1790-1890. Contributions to American Studies, No. 18. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, pp. 25, 59, 60. 1975.4 Beidler, Philip Douglas. “The Parabolic Design: Self Conscious Form in American Narrative.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 35: 4498A. 1975.5 Bennett, Charles E. “Introduction,” in The Life of Charles Brockden Brown by Paul Allen. Delmar, New York: Scholars’ Facsimiles and Reprints, pp. v-xxii. 1975.6 Cleman, John. “Ambiguous Evil: A Study of Villains and Heroes in Charles Brockden Brown’s Major Novels.” EAL, 10 (Fall), 190-219. 1975.7 Franklin, Wayne. “Tragedy and Comedy in Brown’s Wieland.” Novel, 8 (Winter), 14763. 1975.8 Hartley, Dean Wilson. “The Provincial Hero: Studies in the American Consciousness (1799-1970).” Dissertation Abstracts International, 35: 6714A-15A. 1975.9 Hobson, Robert W. “Voices of Carwin and Other Mysteries in Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” EAL, 10 (Winter), 307-309. 1975.10 Kirby, David K., comp. American Fiction to 1960: A Guide to Information Sources. Detroit: Gale Research Co., pp. 37-42. 1975.11 Kolodny, Annette. The Lay of the Land. Metaphor as Experience and History in American Life and Letters. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, pp. 68 and 168. 1975.12 Krause, Sydney J. “Romanticism in Wieland: Brown and the Reconciliation of Opposites,” in Artful Thunder. Versions of the Romantic Tradition in American Literature in Honor of Howard P. Vincent. Edited by Robert J. DeMott and Sanford E. Marovitz. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, pp. 13-24. 1975.13 Monteser, Frederic. The Picaresque Element in Western Literature. University: University of Alabama Press, p. 75. 1975.14 Nelson, Carl W., Jr. “A Method for Madness: The Symbolic Patterns in Arthur Mervyn.” WVUPP, 22 (December), 29-50. 1975.15 Reid, S.W. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Copy of Johnson’s Dictionary (1783).” The Serif. Kent State University Library Quarterly, 11 (Winter), 12-20. 1975.16 Ridgely, J.V. “The Empty World of Wieland,” in Individual and Community: Variations on a Theme in American Literature. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, pp. 3-16. 1975.17 Smith, Allan Gardner. “Nineteenth-Century Psychology in the Fiction of Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Allen Poe, and Nathaniel Hawthorne.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 35: 7880A-81A. 1975.18 Tomlinson, David Otis. “Women in the Writing of Charles Brockden Brown: A Study in the Development of an Author’s Thought.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 35: 5431A. 1975.19 Vella, Michael Wayne. “Inner Vision and Society in the American Novel.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 35: 6685A. 1976.1 Bennett, Charles E. “The Letters of Charles Brockden Brown: An Annotated Census.” RALS, 6 (Autumn), 164-90. 1976.2 Butler, Michael D. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland: Method and Meaning.” SAF, 4 (Autumn), 127-42. 1976.3 Cok, Georgette Weber. “The Allegorical Mode in American Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 36: 8056A-57A. 1976.4 Cowie, Alexander. “Historical Essay,” in Wieland or the Transformation. An American Tale and Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, pp. 311-48. 1976.5 Dimaggio, RICHARD S. “The Tradition of the American Gothic Novel.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 37: 307A. 1976.6 Hoekstra, Ellen Louise Jarvis. “The Characterization of Women in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Ph. D. Dissertation, Michigan State University, 257 pp. 1976.7 McAlexander, Patricia Jewell. “Arthur Mervyn and the Sentimental Love Tradition.” SLitI, 9 (Fall), 31-42. 1976.8 Schechter, Harold George. “The Mysterious Way: Individualization in American Literature.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 36: 6691A. 1976.9 Silverman, Kenneth. A Cultural of the American Revolution: Painting, Music, Literature, and the Theatre in the Colonies and the United States from the Treaty of Paris to the Inauguration of George Washington, 1763-1789. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co., pp. 490, 581. 1976.10 Slanina, Ann Margaret. “The Development of Charles Brockden Brown’s Literary Ideas: A Study of His Major Novels.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 37: 2187-88A. 1976.11 Stout, Janis P. Sodoms in Eden: The City in American Fiction before 1800. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, pp. 44-50. 1976.12 Witherington, Paul. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond: The American Artist and His Masquerades.” SAF, 4 (Spring), 111-19. 1976.13 Reid, S.W. “Textual Essay,” in Wieland or the Transformation. An American Tale and Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, pp. 349-67. 1977.1 Bennett, Charles E. “A Poetical Correspondence among Elihu Hubbard Smith, Joseph Bringhurst, Jr., and Charles Brockden Brown in The Gazette of the United States.” EAL, 12 (Winter), 277-85. 1977.2 Bredahl, A. Carl. “Transformation in Wieland.” EAL, 12 (Fall), 177-92. 1977.3 Craft, Commodore, Jr. “A Study of the Interaction of Good and Evil in the Four Major Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 37: 6483A. 1977.4 Fiedler, Leslie. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Invention of the American Gothic,” in Amerikanische Roman des 19. Jahrhunderts. Edited by Martin Christadler. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesekkschaft, pp. 1-40. 1977.5 Gilmore, Michael T. The Middle Way: Puritanism and Ideology in American Romantic Fiction. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, pp. 80. 92, 96, 166. 1977.6 Gilmore, Michael T. “Calvinism and Gothicism: The Example of Brown’s Wieland.” SNNTS, 98 (Summer), 107-18. 1977.7 Krause, Sydney J.; Reid, S. W., and Cowie, Alexander, eds. Wieland or The Transformation: An American Tale. Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist. Kent: Kent State University Press. 1977.8 Lewis, Paul. “Fearful Questions, Fearful Answers: The Intellectual Functions of Gothic Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 38: 2791A-92A. 1977.9 Reid, S. W. “‘Don Manuel’ and Its Ascription to Charles Brockden Brown.” Resources for American Literary Study 7, 177-181. 1977.8 Reid, S.W. “The Earliest Reposit—‘Replace’?” AN&Q, 15: 86-87. 1977.9 Robbins, J. Albert, et al., comp. American Literary Manuscripts: A Checklist of Holdings in Academic, Historical, and Public Libraries, Museums, and Authors’ Homes in the United States. Second edition. Athens: University of Georgia Press, p. 43. 1977.10 Shelden, Pamela J. “The Shock of Ambiguity: Brockden Brown’s Wieland and theGothic Tradition.” DeKalb Literary Arts Journal (Clarkston, Georgia), 10: 17-26. 1977.11 Spengemann, William C. The Adventurous Muse: The Poetics of American Fiction, 17891900. New Haven: Yale University Press, pp. 98-106. 1977.12 Toles, George Edward, Jr. “The Darkening Window: Four Problematic American Novels.” Dissertation Abstracts International, 37: 4378A. 1977.12.1 Unali, Lina. “Proiezione dell’io in una fittizia autobiografia del ‘700,’ Memoirs of Carwin, the Biloquist, e la Metafora del biloquismo.” Timestre, 10: 45-65. 1977.13 Ward, William S. “American Authors and British Reviewers 1798-1826. A Bibliography.” AL, 49 (March), 1-21. 1978.1 Bennett, Maurice Johnnance. “The Consciousness of the Artist: Charles Brockden Brown, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry James.” Ph. D. Dissertation. Harvard University, pp. 40-115. 1978.2 Borchers, Hans. “Introduction,” in Memoirs of Stephen Calvert. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, pp. ix-xxvii. 1978.3 Eitner, Walter H. “Samuel Miller’s Nation ‘Lately Become Literary’: The Brief Retrospect in Brockden Brown’s Monthly Magazine.” Early American Literature 13, 213-216. 1978.4 Fujimoto, Yukio. “From Amusement to Quest—The Castle of Otronto and Edgar Huntly.” Chu Shikoku Studies in American Literature 14, 61-70. 1978.5 Granger, Bruce. American Essay Serials from Franklin to Irving. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, pp. 228-29. 1978.6 Kinslow, Kenneth Joseph. “Quaker Doctrines and Ideas in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 39: 2938 A-2939 A. 1978.7 Krause, Sydney J. “Ormond: How Rapidly and How Well ‘composed, arranged, and delivered.’” EAL, 13 (Winter), 238-49. 1978.8 Krause, Sydney J. And S.W. Reid. “Introduction,” in Wieland or the Transformation. An American Tale and Carwin the Biloquist. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press (paperback), pp. vii-xxv. 1978.9 Limprecht, Nancy Silverman. “Repudiating the Self-Justifying Fiction: C.B. Brown, N. Hawthorne, and H. Melville as Anti-Romancers.” Dissertation Abstracts 39: 886 A. A dissertation from 1978.10 Seltzer, Mark. “Saying Makes It So: Language and Event in Brown’s Wieland.” EAL, 8 (Spring), 81-91. 1979.1 Beranger, Jean F. “A Psychoanalytical Approach to the Structure of Wieland.” In Siencicka, Marta, ed. Proceedings of a Symposium on American Literature. Poznan: Uniw. Im. Adama Mickiewicza. 1979.2 Bonney, Agnes Mavis. “Artistic Uses of Supernaturalism in the Fiction of Brown, Irving, and Hawthorne.” Dissertation Abstracts 39: 4945 A. A dissertation from 1979.3 Brumm, Ursula. “Nature as Scene or Agent? Some Reflections on Its Role in the American Novel.” In Riese, Teut Andreas, Vistas of a Continent: Concepts of Nature in America. Heidelberg: Winter Verlag. 1979.4 Ferguson, Robert A. “Yellow Fever and Charles Brockden Brown: Context of the Emerging Novelist.” Early American Literature 14, 293-305. 1979.5 Fujimoto, Yukio. “On C. B. Brown’s Narrative Technique.” Hiroshima Studies in English Language and Literature 24, 43-52. 1979.6 Krieg, Joann Peck. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Empire of Romance.” Dissertation Abstracts 40: 2682 A. A dissertation from 1979.7 Martinez, Inez Adel. “Charles Brockden Brown: Fictitious Historian.” Dissertatin Abstracts 40: 3302 A. A dissertation from 1979.8 Russo, James R. “The Chameleon of Convenient Vice: A Study of the Narrative of Arthur Mervyn.” Studies in the Novel 11, 381-405. 1979.9 ___________. “The Tangled Web of Deception and Imposture in Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond.” Early American Literature 14, 205-227. 1980.1 Axelrod, Alan David. “Charles Brockden Brown: An American Tale.” Dissertation Abstracts 40: 4033 A. A dissertation from 1980.2 Christopherson, Bill. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond: The Secret Witness as Ironic Motif.” Modern Language Studies 10:2, 37-41. 1980.3 Ferguson, Robert A. “Literature and Vocation in the Early Republic: The Example of Charles Brockden Brown.” Modern Philology 78, 139-152. 1980.4 Levine, Robert S. “Villainy and the Fear of Conspiracy in Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond.” Early American Literature 15, 124-140. 1980.5 Lewis, Paul. “Beyond Mystery: Emergence from Delusion as a Pattern in Gothic Fiction.” Gothic 2, 7-13. 1980.6 Micklus, Robert. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Curiosity Shop.” Early American Literature 15, 172-187. 1980.7 Patrick, Marietta Stafford. “Romantic Iconography in Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 41: 675A. A dissertation from 1980.8 Russo, James Richard. “The Craft of Charles Brockden Brown’s Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts 50: 5058 A-5059 A. A dissertation from 1980.9 Smith, Allan Gardner. “The Analysis of Motives: Early American Psychology and Fiction.” In Costerus: Essays in English and American Language and Literature. Amsterdam: Rodopi. 1980.10 Voloshin, Beverly Rose. “The Lockean Tradition in the Gothic Fiction of Brown, Poe, and Melville.” Dissertation Abstracts 40: 4047 A. A dissertation from 1980.11 Winston, Robert Paul. “From Farmer Jones to Natty Bumppo: The Frontier and the Early American Romance.” Dissertation Abstracts 40: 4601 A. A dissertation from 1980.12 Yarbrough, Stephen R. “The Tragedy of Isolation: Fictional Technique and Environmentalism in Wieland.” Studies in American Fiction 8, 98-105. 1981.1 Baym, Nina. “A Minority Reading of Wieland.” In 1981.19 1981.2 Beaver, Harold. “The Heart’s Extremes.” Times Literary Supplement 4074 (May 1), 490. 1981.3 Bennett, Charles E. “Charles Brockden Brown: Man of Letters.” In 1981.10 1981.4 Bredahl, A. Carl. “The Two Portraits in Wieland.” Early American Literature 16, 5459. 1981.5 Carpenter, Charles A. “Selective Bibliography of Writings About Charles Brockden Brown.” In 1981.19 1981.6 Clark, Beverly Lyon. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Contagious Unreliability.” International Fiction Review 8, 91-97. 1981.7 Cree, Charles George. “The Pastoral and the Theme of the Validity of Authorship in American Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts 41: 4032A. A dissertation from 1981.8 Davidson, Cathy N. “The Matter and Manner of Charles Brockden Brown’s Alcuin.” In 1981.19 Elliot, Emory. “Narrative Unity and Moral Resolution in Arthur Mervyn.” In 1981.19 Grabo, Norman. The Coincidental Art of Charles Brockden Brown. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 1981.11 Jordan, Cynthia S. “On Rereading Wieland: ‘The Folly of Precipitate Conclusions.’” Early American Literature 16, 154-174. 1981.12 Krause, Sydney J. “Clara Howard and Jane Talbot: Godwin on Trial.” In 1981.19 1981.13 Krause, Sydney J. “Edgar Huntly and the American Nightmare.” Studies in the Novel 13, 294-302. 1981.14 Levine, Robert Steven. “Conspiracy Fears and the American Romance, 1789-1860.” Dissertation Abstracts 41: 4713A-4714A. A dissertation from 1981.15 Myers, Ann Caldwell. “The Novels of Charles Brockden Brown: A Rejection of Utopia.” Dissertation Abstracts 42, 704A-705A. A dissertation from 1981.16 Person, Leland S., Jr. “‘My Good Mamma’: Women in Edgar Huntly and Arthur Mervyn.” Studies in American Fiction 9, 33-46. 1981.17 Reid, S. W. And Caccamo, James F. “The States and Issues of Brown’s Edgar Huntly.” Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 75, 326-339. 1981.18 Rosenthal, Bernard. “The Voices of Wieland.” In 1981.19 1981.19 Rosenthal, Bernard. Critical Essays on Charles Brockden Brown. Boston: G. K. Hall. 1981.20 Russo, James R. “‘The Chimeras of the Brain’: Clara’s Narrative in Wieland.” Early American Literature 16, 60-88. 1981.21 Scheick, William J. “The Problem of Origination in Brown’s Ormond.” In 1981.10 1981.22 Spangler, George M. “C. B. Brown’s Arthur Mervyn: A Portrait of the Young American Artist.” American Literature 52, 578-582. 1981.23 Toles, George. “Charting the Hidden Landscape: Edgar Huntly.” Early American Literature 16, 133-153. 1981.24 Witherington, Paul. “‘Not My Tongue Only’: Form and Language in Brown’s Edgar Huntly.” In 1981.10 1981.25 Young, Philip. “Born Decadent: The American Novel and Charles Brockden Brown.” The Southern Review 17, 501-519. 1982.1 Axelrod, Alan. An American Tale: Charles Brockden Brown. Austin: University of Texas Press. 1982.2 Bennett, Maurice J. “A Portrait of the Artist in Eighteenth-Century America: Charles Brockden Brown’s Memoirs of Stephen Calvert.” The William and Mary Quarterly 39, 492-507. 1982.3 Brown, Susan Marie Williams. “Villainy in Brockden Brown’s Wieland and Arthur Mervyn: Structural Unity through the Development of Characters and Universal Themes.” Dissertation Abstracts 43: 1146A. A dissertation from 1982.4 Engel, Leonard. “The Role of the Enclosure in the English and American Gothic Romance.” Essays in Arts and Sciences 11, 59-68. 1982.5 Feeney, Joseph J., S.J. “Modernized by 1800: The Portrait of Urban America, especially Philadelphia, in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” American Studies 23, 25-38. 1982.6 Fleischmann, Fritz. “Charles Brockden Brown: Feminism in Fiction.” In Fleischmann, Fritz, ed. American Novelists Revisited: Essays in Feminist Criticism. Boston: G. K. Hall. 1982.7 Hesford, Walter. “‘Do You Know the Author?’ The Question of Authorship in Wieland.” Early American Literature 17: 239-248. 1982.8 Krause, Sydney J.; Reid, S. W.; Nye, Russell B. Ormond or the Secret Witness; Bicentennial Edition. Kent: Kent State University Press. 1982.9 Kreyling, Michael. “Construing Brown’s Wieland: Ambiguity and Derridean “Freeplay.” Studies in the Novel 14, 43-54. 1982.10 Limon, John Keith. “Imagining Science: The Influence and Metamorphosis of Science in Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Allen Poe, and Nathaniel Hawthorne.” Dissertation Abstracts 42, 5122A-5123A. A dissertation from 1982.11 Monahan, Kathleen Nolan. “The Relationship Between Character and Idea in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 42: 3159A. A dissertation from 1982.12 Newman, Robert D. “Brown’s Edgar Huntly.” Explicator 40, 25-26. 1982.13 Oliver, Lawrence James, Jr. “Kinesthetic Imagery and the Nightmare of Falling in the Fiction of Brown, Cooper, Poe, and Melville.” Dissertation Abstracts 42: 216A-217A. A dissertation from 1982.14 Pitman, Janet D. “The Wilderness Experience of James Dickey’s Deliverance and Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly.” Ball State University Forum 23, 73-80. 1982.15 Ringe, Donald A. American Gothic: Imagination and Reason in Nineteenth-Century Fiction. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. 1982.16 Tucker, Amy. “John Singleton Copley and Charles Brockden Brown: Forerunners of American Artistic Tradition.” Mid-Hudson Language Studies 5, 63-70. 1983.1 Bennett, Maurice J. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Ambivalence toward Art and Imagination.” Essays in Literature 10, 55-69. 1983.2 Engell, John Frederick. “Brackenridge, Brown, Cooper, and the Roots of the American Novel.” Dissertation Abstracts 43: 2666A. A dissertation from 1983.3 Fleischmann, Fritz. A Right View of the Subject: Feminism in the Works of Charles Brockden Brown and John Neal. Erlangen: Palm and Enke 1983.4 Fussell, Edwin Sill. “Wieland: A Literary and Historical Reading.” Early American Literature 18, 171-186. 1983.5 Slater, John F. “The Sleepwalker and the Great Awakening: Brown’s Edgar Huntly and Jonathan Edwards.” Papers on Language and Literature 19, 199-217. 1984.1 Berthold, Dennis. “Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Huntly, and the Origins of the American Picturesque.” The William and Mary Quarterly 41, 62-84. 1984.2 Ferguson, Robert A. Law and Letters in American Culture. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 1984.3 Hardt, John Stephen. “The Darkening Garden: Paradisal Skepticism in American Fiction, Brown through Melville.” Dissertation Abstracts 45: 521A. A dissertation from 1984.4 Hume, Beverly Ann. “The Framing of Evil: Romantic Visions and Revisions in American Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts 44: 3685A. A dissertation from 1984.5 Krause, Sydney J. and Reid, S. W. Edgar Huntly, or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker; Bicentennial Edition. Kent: Kent State University Press. 1984.6 Levine, Robert S. “Arthur Mervyn’s Revolutions.” Studies in American Fiction 12, 145160. 1984.7 Patrick, Marietta. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond: A Psychological Portrait of Constantia Dudley.” Journal of Evolutionary Psychology 5, 112-128. 1984.8 Patrick, Marietta Stafford. “Romantic Iconography in Wieland.” South Atlantic Review 49, 65-74. 1984.9 Steinberg, Paul Scott. “On the Brink of the Precipice: Madness in the Writings of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 43: 2671A 1984.10 Sullivan, Michael Patrick. “Reconciliation and Subversion in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 45: 1401A. A dissertation from 1984.11 Tilton, Eleanor M. “In the Labyrinth of Charles Brockden Brown’s Prose: The Bicentennial Edition.” Early American Literature 19, 191-208. 1984.12 Warchol, Tomasz Andrzej. “A Study of the Fiction of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 45: 1755A. A dissertation from 1984.13 Weldon, Robert F. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland: A Family Tragedy.” Studies in American Fiction 12, 1-11. 1985.1 Christopherson, Bill. “‘Father of the American Novel’: Brockden Brown in the 80’s.” Western Humanities Review 39, 77-85. 1985.2 Green, Gary Lee. “The Language of Nightmare”: A Theory of American Gothic Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts 46: 1279A. A dissertation from 1985.3 Pribek, Thomas. “A Note on ‘Depravity’ in Wieland.” Philological Quarterly 64, 273279. 1985.4 Samuels, Shirley. “Plague and Politics in 1793: Arthur Mervyn.” Criticism 27, 225-246. 1985.5 Tompkins, Jane. Sensational Designs: The Cultural Work of American Fiction 17901860. New York: Oxford University Press. 1985.6 Tutor, Jonathan C. “Disappointed Expectations: Artistic Strategy in Ormond.” Publications of the Mississippi Philological Association, 67-80. 1986.1 Bertholt, Dennis. “Desacralizing the American Gothic: An Iconographic Approach to Edgar Huntly.” Studies in American Fiction 14, 127-138. 1986.2 Christopherson, Bill. “Picking Up the Knife: a Psycho-Historical Reading of Wieland.” American Studies 27, 115-126. 1986.3 Cohen, Daniel A. “Arthur Mervyn and His Elders: The Ambivalence of Youth in the Early Republic.” The William and Mary Quarterly 43, 362-380. 1986.4 Davidson, Cathy N. Revolution and the Word: The Rise of the Novel in America. New York: Oxford University Press. 1986.5 Krause, Sydney J.; Reid, S. W.; Ringe, Donald. The Novels and Related Works of Charles Brockden Brown, V: Clara Howard in a Series of Letters with Jane Talbot, a Novel. Kent: Kent State University Press. 1986.6 Moses, Richard P. “The Quakerism of Charles Brockden Brown.” Quaker History 75, 12-25. 1986.7 Patrick, Marietta Stafford. “The Doppelgänger Motif in Arthur Mervyn.” Journal of Evolutionary Psychology 7, 91-101. 1986.8 Voloshin, Beverly R. “Wieland: ‘Accounting for Appearances.’” The New England Quarterly 59, 341-357. 1987.1 Barnard, Philip. “Charles Brockden Brown: Early-Romantic Literature in the United States.” Dissertation Abstracts 48: 1196A. A dissertation from State University of New York at Buffalo. 1987.2 Bellis, Peter J. “Narrative Compulsion and Control in Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly.” South Atlantic Review 52, 43-57. 1987.3 Bennett, Maurice J. An American Tradition—Three Studies: Charles Brockden Brown, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry James. New York, Garland, 1987. 1987.4 Broderick, Warren F. “Fiction Based on ‘Well-Authenticated Facts’” Documenting the Birth of the American Novel. Hudson Valley Regional Review 4, 1-37. 1987.5 Krause, Sydney J.; Reid, S.W.; Arner, Robert D. The Novels and Related Works of Charles Brockden Brown, VI: Alcuin: A Dialogue and Memoirs of Stephen Calvert. Kent: Kent State University Press. 1987.6 Lueck, Beth L. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly: The Picturesque Traveler as Sleepwalker.” Studies in American Fiction 15, 25-42. 1987.7 McKinley, Virginia Susan Gallaher. “Rendering up ‘the Tale of What We Are’: Gothic Narrative Methods in Selected Novels of Godwin, Brown and Shelley.” Dissertation Abstracts 47: 2597A. 1987.8 Monahan, Kathleen Nolan. “Brown’s Arthur Mervyn and Ormond.” Explicator 45, 1820. 1987.9 Samuels, Shirely. “Infidelity of Contagion: The Rhetoric of Revolution.” Early American Literature 22, 183-191. 1987.10 Seelye, John. “Charles Brockden Brown and Early American Fiction.” In Elliott, Emory, et al., ed. Columbia Literary History of the United States. New York: Columbia University Press. 1987.11 Warchal, Tomasz. “Formal and Thematic Patterns in Edgar Huntly.” Ball State University Forum 28, 16-24. 1987.12 Weber, Alfred. Somnambulism and Other Stories. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. 1988.1 Budick, E. Miller. “The Origins of American Historical Romance.” The Early Republic: the Making of a Nation, the Making of a Culture. European Association for American Studies. Amsterdam: Free Press, 299-305. 1988.2 Clark, Michael. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland and Robert Proud’s History of Pennsylvania.” Studies in the Novel 20, 239-248. 1988.3 Grabo, Norman. Introduction. In Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Huntly or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker. New York: Penguin, vii-xxiii. 1988.4 Hagenbüchle, Roland. “American Literature and the Nineteenth-Century Crisis in Epistemology: The Example of Charles Brockden Brown.” Early American Literature 23, 121-151. 1988.5 Hale, Dorothy J. “Profits of Altruism: Caleb Williams and Arthur Mervyn.” EighteenthCentury Studies 22, 47-69. 1988.6 Larson, David M. “Arthur Mervyn, Edgar Huntly, and the Critics.” Essays in Literature 15, 207-219. 1988.7 Newman, Robert D. “Indians and Indian-Hating in Edgar Huntly and The Confidence Man.” MELUS 15, 65-74. [MLA lists 1990] 1988.8 Seelye, John. “Charles Brockden Brown and Early American Fiction.” In Emory Elliott, ed. Columbia Literary History of the United States, 168-186. 1988.9 Sullivan, Michael P. “Reconciliation and Subversion in Edgar Huntly.” American Transcendental Quarterly 2, 5-22. 1988.10 Voloshin, Beverly R. “Edgar Huntly and the Coherence of the Self.” Early American Literature 23, 262-280. 1989.1 Cappello, Mary Catherine. “Writing the Spirit/Reading the Mind: Representations of Illness and Health in Nineteenth Century American Literature.” Dissertation Abstracts 49: 3722A 1989.2 Croft, Lee B. “Spontaneous Human Combustion in Literature: Some Examples of the Literary Use of Popular Mythology.” College Language Association Journal 32, 335347. 1989.3 Jordan, Cynthia. Second Stories: The politics of Language, Form and Gender in Early American Fictions. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 1989.4 Levine, Robert S. Conspiracy and Romance: Studies in Brockden Brown, Cooper, Hawthorne, and Melville. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1989.5 Patrick, Marietta. “The Transformation Myth in Edgar Huntly.” Journal of Evolutionary Psychology 10, 360-371. 1990.1 Cassuto, Leonard D. “The American Grotesque.” Dissertation Abstracts 50: 2486A. 1990.2 Dauber, Kenneth. The Idea of Authorship in America: Democratic Poetics from Franklin to Melville. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 39-77. 1990.3 Gabler-Hover, Janet. Truth in American Fiction: The Legacy of Rhetorical Idealism. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 1990.4 Hinds, Elizabeth Jane Wall. “The Hero in Time: The American Gothic Fiction of Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Allen Poe and Herman Melville.” Dissertation Abstracts 50: 2053A. 1990.5 Holmes, John R. and Saeger, Edwin J. “Charles Brockden Brown and the ‘LauraPetrarch’ Letters.” Early American Literature 25, 183-188. 1990.6 Kittel, Harald. “Free Indirect Discourse and the Experiencing Self in Eighteenth-Century American Autobiographical Fiction: The Narration of Consciousness in Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” New Comparison 9, 73-89. 1990.7 Lee, Robert A. “A Darkness Visible: The Case of Charles Brockden Brown.” In Doucherty, Brian, ed. American Horror Fiction: From Brockden Brown to Stephen King. New York: St. Martin’s Press. 1990.8 Limon, John. The Place of Fiction in the Time of Science: A Disciplinary History of American Writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1990.9 Litton, Alfred G. “The Failure of Rhetoric in Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” Lamar Journal of the Humanities 16, 23-40 1990.10 Newman, Robert D. “Indians and Indian-Hating in Edgar Huntly and The Confidence Man.” MELUS 15, 65-74. [Kamrath lists 1988] 1990.11 O’Shaughnessy, Toni. “‘An Imperfect Tale’: Interpretive Accountability in Wieland.” Studies in American Fiction 18, 41-54. 1990.12 Samuels, Shirley. “Wieland: Alien and Infidel.” Early American Literature 25, 45-66. 1990.13 Stott, G. St. John. “Second Thoughts about Ormond.” Etudes Anglaises 43, 157-168. 1990.14 Warner, Michael. Letters of the Republic: Publication and the Public Sphere in Eighteenth-Century America. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 1991.1 Anderson, Douglas. “Edgar Huntly’s Dark Inheritance.” Philological Quarterly 70, 453473. 1991.2 Fliegelman, Jay. Introduction in Charles Brockden Brown, Wieland and Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist. New York: Penguin, vii-xlii. 1991.3 Frank, Armin Paul. “In der romance leben: Zu Charles Brockden Browns Edgar Huntly (1799) und einer alten ‘modernistischen.” Erzähltradition in Amerika.” In Frank, Armin Paul, ed. Frühe Formen mehrperspektivischen Erzählens von der Edda bis Flaubert. Berlin: Schmidt. 1991.4 Herdman, John. The Double in Nineteenth-Century Fiction: the Shadow Life. New York: St. Martin’s Press. 1991.5 Kamrath, Mark L. “Brown and the Enlightenment: A Study of the Influence of Voltaire’s Candide in Edgar Huntly.” American Transcendental Quarterly 5, 6-14. 1991.6 Litton, Alfred G. “The Failure of Rhetoric in Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” Lamar Journal of the Humanities 16, 23-40. 1991.7 Porte, Joel. In Respect to Egotism:Studies in American Romantic Writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1991.8 Ringe, Donald A. Charles Brockden Brown, Revised Edition. Ed. Pattie Cowell. Boston: Twayne. 1991.9 Schäfer, Wolfgang. Charles Brockden Brown als Literaturkritiker. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. 1991.10 Schreiber, Andrew J. “‘The Arm Lifted Against Me’: Love, Terror, and the Construction of Gender in Wieland.” Early American Literature 26, 173-194. 1991.11 Ziff, Larzer. Writing in the New Nation: Prose, Print, and Politics in the Early United States. New Haven: Yale University Press. 1992.1 Kafer, Peter. “Charles Brockden Brown and Revolutionary Philadelphia: An Imagination in Context.” Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 116, 467-498. 1992.2 Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll. “Coquettes e rivoluzionari nella giovane America: La virtu addomesticata.” Comunita: Revista di Informazione Culturale 44-45. 234-254. 1992.2 Stern, Julia Ann. “Parsing the First Person Plural: Transformations of Gender and Voice in the Fiction of Charles Brockden Brown and Edgar Allen Poe.” Dissertation Abstracts 52: 2926A. A dissertation from Columbia University. 1992.3 Verhoeven, W. M. “Displacing the Discontinuous: Or, The Labyrinths of Reason: Fictional Design and Eighteenth-Century Thought in Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond.” In Verhoeven, W. M., ed., Rewriting the Dream: Reflections on the Changing American Literary Canon. Amsterdam: Rodopi. 1992.4 Weber, Alfred and Wolfgang Schäfer, in collaboration with John R. Holmes, Charles Brockden Brown: Literary Essays and Reviews. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. 1992.5 Vickers, Anita M. “From Godwinism to Radical Federalism: The Developing Political Agenda in the Fiction of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts International 53: 3216A-17A. A dissertation from Purdue University. 1993.1 Bradfield, Scott. Dreaming Revolution: Transgression in the Development of American Romance. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press. 1993.2 Bottalico, Michele. “The American Frontier and the Initiation Rite to a National Literature. The Example of Edgar Huntly by Charles Brockden Brown.” RSA Journal 4, 3-16. 1993.3 Christopherson, Bill. The Apparition in the Glass: Charles Brockden Brown’s American Gothic. Athens: University of Georgia Press. 1993.4 Clemit, Pamela. The Godwinian Novel: The Rational Fictions of Godwin, Brockden Brown, Mary Shelley. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1993.5 Cowell, Pattie. “Class, Gender, and Genre: Deconstructing the Social Formulas on the Gothic Frontier.” In David Mogen, Scott P. Sanders, and Joanne B. Karpinski, eds. Frontier Gothic: Terror and Wonder at the Frontier in American Literature. Rutherford: Fairleigh Dickenson University Press. 1993.6 Erickson, David Elliot. Republican Fictions in Search of an Audience: The Works of Charles Brockden Brown. Diss. University of Illinois. 1993.7 Hamelman, Steve. “Rhapsodist in the Wilderness: Brown’s Romantic Quest in Edgar Huntly.” Studies in American Fiction 21, 171-190. 1993.8 Hinds, Elizabeth Jane Wall. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Frontiers of Discourse.” In Mogen, David, ed. Frontier Gothic: Terror and Wonder at the Frontier in American Literature. Rutherford: Fairleigh Dickenson University Press. 1993.9 Kindermann, Wolf. Man Unknown to Himself: kritische Reflexion der ameriknischen Aufklärung: Crèvecoeur, Benjamin Rush, Charles Brockden Brown. Tübingen: G. Narr, 1993. 1993.10 Patrick, Marietta. “Myth Images in Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond.” The University of Mississippi Studies in English 11-12, 294-302. 1993.11 Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll. “Subject Female: Authorizing American Identity.” American Literary History 5, 481-511. 1993.12 Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll. “Captured Subjects/Savage Others: Violently Engendering the New American.” Gender and History 5, 177-195. 1994.1 Decker, James M. “Reassessing Charles Brockden Brown’s Clara Howard.” Publications of the Missouri Philological Association 19. 28-36. 1994.2 Ericksen, David Elliott. “Republican Fictions in Search of an Audience: The Works of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 54: 4091A-4092 A. A dissertation from University of Illinois, Urbana. 1994.3 Gardner, Jared. “Alien Nation: Edgar Huntly’s Savage Awakening.” American Literature 66, 429-61. 1994.4 Krause, Sydney. “Penn’s Elm and Edgar Huntly: Dark ‘Instruction to the Heart.’” American Literature 66, 463-484. 1994.5 Mertz, Harald. Charles Brockden Brown als politischer Schriftsteller. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. 1994.6 Morris, Colin Jeffrey. “Virtuosity and Theatricality: A Study of William Dunlap and Charles Brockden Brown.” Diss. University of Rocheser. 1994.7 Robinson, Arthur Thomas. “The Third Horseman of the Apocalypse: A Multidisciplinary Social History of the 1793 Yellow Fever Epidemic in Philadelphia.” Dissertation Abstracts 54: 4492A. A dissertation from Washington State University. 1994.8 Rombes, Nicholas, Jr. “‘All Was Lonely, Darksome, and Waste’: Wieland and the Construction of the New Republic.” Studies in American Fiction 22, 37-46. 1994.9 Vatalaro, Paul. “Edgar Huntly: Charles Brockden Brown’s Early American Fairy Tale.” Journal of Evolutionary Psychology 15, 3-4, 259-68. 1994.10 Watts, Steven. The Romance of Real Life: Charles Brockden Brown and the Origins of American Culture. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. 1995.1 Carballo, Robert. “Another Look at Shakespearean Tragedy as Proto-Text for Wieland.” Neohelicon 22, 75-85. 1995.2 Eiselein, Gregory. “Humanitarianism and Uncertainty in Arthur Mervyn.” Essays in Literature 22, 215-226. 1995.3 Hinds, Elizabeth Jane Wall. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Revenge Tragedy: Edgar Huntly and the Uses of Property.” Early American Literature 30, 51-70. 1995.4 Holmes, John R. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Earliest Letter.” Early American Literature 30, 71-77. 1995.5 Kornfield, Eve. “Encountering ‘the Other’: American Intellectuals in the 1790s.” William and Mary Quarterly 52, 287-314. 1995.6 Schnell, Michael. “The Sacredness of Conjugal and Parental Duties’: the Family, the Twentieth-Century Reader, and Wieland.” Christianity & Literature 44, 259-73. 1995.7 Verhoeven, W. M. “Opening the Text: The Locked-Trunk Motif in Late EighteenthCentury British and American Gothic Fiction.” In Tinkler, Villani Valeria; Davidson, Peter; and Stevenson, Jane, eds. Exhibited by Candlelight: Sources and Developments in the Gothic Tradition. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 205-219. 1995.8 Zhang, Dingquan. “The Ideological Polyphony in the Fictional World of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 56: 937A. A dissertation from Indiana University, Pennsylvania. 1996.1 Bauer, Ralph. “Between Repression and Transgression: Rousseau’s Confessions and Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” American Transcendental Quarterly 10, 311-329. 1996.2 Burgett, Bruce. “Masochism and Male Sentimentalism: Charles Brockden Brown’s Clara Howard.” Arizona Quarterly 52, 1-25. 1996.3 Dillon, James Joseph. Educational Novels, Novelistic Education: The Case of the Early Republic. Diss. University of Texas at Austin. 1996.4 Downes, Paul. “Sleep-Walking Out of the Revolution: Brown’s Edgar Huntly.” Eighteenth-Century Studies 29, 413-431. 1996.5 Healy, Kathleen Mary. “Picturing Utopia: A Cultural and Literary Analysis of the Iconography of Landscape in Selected American Paintings and Works by Charles Brockden Brown, Caroline Kirkland, Margaret Fuller and Henry David Thoreau.” Dissertation Abstracts 56: 3581A-3582A. A dissertation from Pennsylvania State University. 1996.6 Kamrath, Mark Lloyd. “The ‘Novel’ Historicism of Charles Brockden Brown.” Dissertation Abstracts 57: 1194A. A dissertation from University of Nebraska, Lincoln. 1996.7 Keitel, Evelyne. “Das eigene Fremde, das fremde Eigene: Charles Brockden Browns Romane im kulturellen Spannungsfeld zwischen England und Amerika.” Amerikastudien 41, 533-555. 1996.8 Lamont, Elizabeth M. “Pathologies of the Postrevolutionary American Soul: The Function of Disease in the Major Novels of Charles Brockden Brown” Dissertation Abstracts 57: 681A. A dissertation from University of Tennessee. 1996.9 Lewis, Paul. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Gendered Canon of Early American Fiction.” Early American Literature 31, 167-188. 1996.10 Looby, Christopher. Voicing America: Language, Literary Form, and the Origins of the United States. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1996.11 Reising, Russell. Loose Ends: Closure and Crisis in the American Social Text. Durham: Duke University Press. 1996.12.1 Samuels, Shirley. Romances of the Republic: Women, the Family, and Violence in the Literature of the Early American Nation. New York: Oxford University Press. 1996.13 Schloss, Dietmar. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Arthur Mervyn and the Idea of Civic Virtue.” Democracy and the Arts in the United States. Eds. Alfred Hornung, Reinhard R. Doerries, and Gerhard Hoffman. München: Fink, 171-182. 1996.14 Seed, David. “The Mind Set Free: Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” In Lee, A. Robert and Verhoeven, W. M, eds., Making America/Making American Literature. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 105-122. 1996.15 Shapiro, Stephen Aaron. “‘Dread and Curious Alteration’: Republican Panic and Personal Intimation in Early American Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts 56: 2742A2743A. A dissertation from Yale University. 1996.16 Toner, Jennifer Dilallia. “Imaginary Portraits: The Fictional Life-Narrative in America From Brown to Melville.” Diss. Johns Hopkins University. 1996.17 Verhoeven, W. M. “‘Persuasive Rhetoric’: Representation and Resistance in Early American Epistolary Fiction.” In Lee, A. Robert and Verhoeven, W. M, eds., Making America/Making American Literature. Amsterdam: Rodopi,123-164. 1996.18 Woodard, Maureen L. “Female Captivity and the Deployment of Race in Three Early American Texts.” Papers on Language and Literature 32, 115-146. 1997.1 Achilles, Jochen. “Composite (Dis)Order: Cultural Identity in Wieland, Edgar Huntly, and Arthur Gorden Pym.” In Kevin L. Cope and Laura Morrow, ed., Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquires in the Early Modern Era. New York: AMS, 251-270. 1997.2 Barnes, Elizabeth. States of Sympathy: Seduction and Democracy in the American Novel. New York: Columbia University Press. 1997.3 Brückner, Martin. “Models of World-Making: The Language of Geography in American Literature, 1750-1825.” Diss. Brandeis University. 1997.4 Downes, Paul. “Constitutional Secrets: ‘Memoirs of Carwin’ and the politics of Concealment.” Criticism 39, 89-117. 1997.5 Goddu, Teresa. Gothic America: Narrative, History, and Nation. New York: Columbia, University Press. 1997.6 Hinds, Elizabeth Jane Wall. Private Property: Charles Brockden Brown’s Gendered Economics of Virtue. Newark, Delaware: University of Delaware Press. 1997.7 Levin, Douglas Edward. “Figure Out: The Politics of Textuality in Early American Fiction.” Dissertation Abstracts 58: 1281A. A dissertation from Yale University. 1997.8 Mackenthun, Gesa. “Captives and Sleepwalkers: The Ideological Revolutions of PostRevolutionary Colonial Discourse.” Native American Studies 11, 19-25. 1997.9 Manning, Susan L. “Enlightenment’s Dark Dreams: Two Fictions of Henry Mackenzie and Charles Brockden Brown.” Eighteenth Century Life 21, 39-56. 1997.10 Scheiding, Oliver. “‘Nothing but a Disjointed and Mutilated Tale’: Zur narrativen Strategie der ‘Thessalonica: A Roman Story.’” Literaturwissenschaftliches Jahrbuch im Auftrage der Gorres Gessellschaft 38, 93-110. 1997.11 Surratt, Marshall N. “‘The Awe-Creating Presence of the Deity: Some Religious Sources for Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” Papers on Language and Literature 33, 310324. 1998.1 Burgett, Bruce. Sentimental Bodies: Sex, Gender, and Citizenship in the Early Republic. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 1998.2 Digeronimo, Gretchen Elspeth. Transactional Bond in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown. Diss. University of New Hampshire. 1998.3 Frye, Steven. “Constructing Indigeneity: Postcolonial Dynamics in Charles Brockden Brown’s Monthly Magazine and American Review.” American Studies 39, 69-88. 1998.4 Gable, Jr., Harvey L. “Wieland, Othello, Genesis, and the Floating City: the Sources of Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland. Papers on Language & Literature 34, 301-318. 1998.5 Krause, Sidney J., ed. Three Gothic Novels: Wieland, or the Transformation; Arthur Mervyn, or, Memoirs of the Year 1793; Edgar Huntley, or, Memoirs of a Sleep Walker. New York: Library of America. 1998.6 Luciano, Dana. “Perverse Nature’: Edgar Huntly and the Novel’s Reproductive Disorders.” American Literature 70, 1-27. 1998.7 Paryz, Marek. “Madness, Man and Social Order in Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland. American Studies (Warsaw, Poland) 16, 31-47. 1998.8 Scheiding, Oliver. “Plena exemplorum est historia’: Rewriting Exemplary History in Charles Brockden Brown’s ‘Death of Cicero.’” In Bernd Engler and Oliver Scheiding, ed. Re-visioning the Past: Historical Self-Reflexivity in American Short Fiction, 39-50. 1998.9 Smyth, Heather. “Imperfect Disclosures: Cross-Dressing and Containment in Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond.” In Merril D. Smith, ed., Sex and Sexuality in the Early American Novel. New York: New York University Press, 240-261. 1998.10 Stern, Julia A. The Plight of Feeling: Sympathy and Dissent in the Early American Novel. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1998.11 Vickers, Anita M. “Patriarchal and Political Authority in Wieland.” AUMLA: Journal of he Australasian Universities Language and Literature Association 90, 1-19. 1998.12 __________. “Pray, madam, are you a federalist?’: Women’s Rights and the Republican Utopia of Alcuin.” American Studies 39, 89-104. 1998.13 Watts, Edward. Writing and Postcolonialism in the Early Republic. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. 1998.14 Ziaja-Buchholz, Miroslawa. “Wieland: Or the Transformation by Charles Brockden Brown: An Attempt at Interpretation.” American Studies 16, 23-29. 1999.1 Amfreville, Marc. “Charles Brockden Borwn et Edgar Allan Poe: Transformations et anamorphoses: Figures de la literature amaericaine.” Revue du Centre de Recherche sur l’Imaginaire dans les Litteratures de Langue Anglaise 4. 163-174. 1999.2 Chapman, Mary. Introduction. In Charles Brockden Brown, Ormond: or, The Secret Witness. Broadview, 9-31. 1999.3 Cody, Michael. Charles Brockden Brown and the Literary Magazine, and American Register. Diss., University of South Carolina. 1999.4 Crain, Caleb. American Sympathy: Friendship in Early U.S. Literature. Diss. Columbia University. 1999.5 Christopherson, Bill. “Charles Brockden Brown, Enthusiasm and the Ghost of William Penn.” In Marc Amfreville and Francoise Charras, Profils Americains: Charles Brockden Brown 11, 135-48. 1999.6 Fluck, Winfried. “Novels of Transition: From Sentimental Novel to Domestic Novel.” In Udo J. Hebel, ed., The Construction and Contestation of American Cultures and Identities in the Early National Period. Heidelberg: Carl Winter Universitätsverlag, 97117. 1999.7 Idiart, Jeannette and Schulz, Jennifer, “American Gothic Landscapes: The New World to Vietnam.” In Glennis Byron and David Punter, ed., Spectral Readings: Towards a Gothic Geography. New York: St. Martin’s, 127-139. 1999.8 Kamrath, Mark. “Charles Brockden Brown and Contemporary Theory: A Review of Recent Critical Trends in Brown Scholarship.” In Marc Amfreville and Françoise Charras, Profils Américains: Charles Brockden Brown 11, 213-277. 1999.9 Scheick, William J. “Assassin in Artful Disguise: The De-Signed Designs of Charles Brockden Brown’s ‘Somnambulism.’” In Marc Amfreville and Francoise Charras, Profils Americains: Charles Brockden Brown 11, 27-46. 1999.10 Schloss, Dietmar. “Intellectuals and Women: Social Rivalry in Charles Brockden Brown’s Alcuin.” In Udo J. Hebel, ed., The Construction and Contestation of American Cultures and Identities in the Early National Period. Heidelberg: Carl Winter Universitätsverlag, 355-369. 1999.11 Verhoeven, Wil M. “Performing Revolution: Charles Brockden Brown and the Jacobin Legacy in America.” In Marc Amfreville and Francoise Charras, Profils Americains: Charles Brockden Brown 11, 121-34. 1999.12 Wallach, Rick. “The Manner in Which Appearances are Solved: Narrative Semiotics in Wieland, or the Transformation.” South Atlantic Review 64. 1-15. 1999.13 Wood, Sarah F. “Foul Contagion and Perilous Asylums: The Role of the Refugee in Ormond and Arthur Mervyn.” Overhere: a European Journal of American Culture. 18:3 (Autumn), 82-92. 2000.1 Amfreville, Marc. Charles Brockden Brown La part du doute. Paris: Belin, 2000. 2000.2 Albert, Lauren Gale. The Friction of Experience: Community and Understanding in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown. Diss. City University of New York. DAI 9959157. 2000.3 Berressem, Hanjo. “ ‘To Make Sense of a Random Act of Violence’: Tyche, Automaton, and Trauma in Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly, or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker. Amerikastudien 45, 55-72. 2000.4 Brückner, Martin. “Geography, Reading, and the World of Novels in the Early Republic.” In Klaus H. Schmidt and Fritz Fleischmann, Early America Re-Explored: New Readings in Colonial, Early National, and Antebellum Culture. New York: Peter Lang, 385-410. 2000.5 Fleischmann, Fritz. “Concealed Lessons: Foster’s Coquette and Brockden Brown’s ‘Lesson on Concealment.” ed. Fritz Fleischmann and Klaus H. Schmidt. Early America Re-Explored: New Readings in Colonial, Early National, and Antebellum Culture. New York: Peter Lang. 309-48. 2000.6 Hamelman, Steven. “Secret to the Last: Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond.” LIT: Literature-Interpretation-Theory 11, 305-26. 2000.7 Hsu, Hsuan L. “Democratic Expansionism in Memoirs of Carwin.” Early American Literature 35. 137-56. 2000.8 Kafer, Peter. “Charles Brockden Brown and the Pleasures of ‘Unsanctified Imagination.’” William and Mary Quarterly 57, 543-568. 2000.9 Kaufman, Frederick Leonard. The Autonomic American. Diss. City U of New York. DAI 9946182. 2000.10 Korobkin, Laura H. “Murder by Madman: Criminal Responsibility, Law, and Judgment in Wieland.” American Literature 72, 721-750. 2000.11 Krause, Sydney J. “Brockden Brown’s Feminism in Fact and Fiction.” ed. Klaus H. Schmidt and Fritz Fleischmann. Early America Re-Explored: New Readings in Colonial, Early National, and Antebellum Culture. New York: Peter Lang. 349-84. 2000.12 O’Leary, Crystal Laraine. ‘A Grave for this Book’: Textual Fetishism in American Gothic from Brockden Brown to John Carpenter. Diss. University of Louisiana, Lafayette. DAI 9975273. 2000.13 Rosen, Elizabeth Melinda. Natural Causes: American Gothic Literature and the Doctrine of Natural Law. Diss. City University of New York. DAI DA 9959219. 2000.14 Shaw, David Martin. ‘External and Real, But Not Supernatural’: The Terror of the Soul in Brockden Brown and Poe. Diss. University of Toronto. DAI NQ46511. 2000.15 Traister, Bruce. “Libertinism and Authorship in America’s Early Republic.” American Literature 72, 1-30. 2001.1 Cahill, Edward. “An Adventurous and Lawless Fancy: Charles Brockden Brown’s Aesthetic State.” Early American Literature 36. 31-70. 2001.2 Crain, Caleb. American Sympathy: Men, Friendship, and Literature in the New Nation. Yale University Press. 2001.3 Gunning, Tom. “Doing for the Eye What the Phonograph Does for the Ear.” in Richard Abel and Rick Altman, ed., The Sounds of Early Cinema. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 13-31. 2001.4 Kamrath, Mark L. “Charles Brockden Brown and the ‘art of the historian’: An Essay Concerning (Post)modern Historical Understanding.” Journal of the Early Republic 21. 231-60. 2001.5 Kazanikian, David. “Charles Brockden Brown’s Biloquial Nation: National Culture and White Settler Colonialism in Memoirs of Carwin the Biloquist.” American Literature 73. 459-496. 2001.6 Kutchen, Larry. “The ‘Vulgar Thread of the Canvas’: Revolution and the Picturesque in Ann Eliza Bleecker, Cevecoeur, and Charles Brockden Brown.” Early American Literature 36. 395-426. 2001.7 Sivils, Matthew Wynn. “Native American Sovereignty and Old Deb in Charles Brockden Brown’s Edgar Huntly.” American Transcendental Quarterly 15. 293-304. 2001.8 Steinman, Lisa M. “Transatlantic Cultures: Godwin, Brown, and Mary Shelley.” Wordsworth Circle 32, 126-30. 2001.9 Theriot, Michelle Daigle. “Eden Reversed: Eve as ‘Bridge’ Figure in the Longer Fiction of Charles Brockden Brown and Nathaniel Hawthorne.” Dissertation Abstracts 61 A: 3574. 2002.1 Dill, Elizabeth. “The Republican Stepmother: Revolution and Sensibility in Charles Brockden Brown’s Wieland.” Eighteenth-Century Novel 2, 273-303. 2002.2 Leask, Nigel. “Irish Republicans and Gothic Eleuterarchs: Pacific Utopias in the Writings of Theobald Wolfe Tone and Charles Brockden Brown.” In Robert M. Maniquis, ed., British Radical Culture of the 1790’s. San Marino, CA: Huntington Library, 2002. 2002.3 Norwood, Lisa Barron West. “Grounds for the New Nation: Construction Sense of Place in American Writing from 1780-1860. DAI 63 A: 190. 2002.4 Schneck, Peter. “Wieland’s Testimony: Charles Brockden Brown and the Rhetoric of Evidence.” REAL: The Yearbook of Research in English and American Literature 18, 167-213. 2002.5 Thomson, Douglass H. "Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810)." Gothic Writers: A Critical and Bibliographical Guide. Ed. Frederick S. Frank, Douglass H. Thomson, and Jack G. Voller. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 2002. 76-82. 2002.6 Barnes, Elizabeth. "Loving with a Vengeance: Wieland, Familicide and the Crisis of Masculinity in the Early Nation." Boys Don't Cry?: Rethinking Narratives of Masculinity and Emotion in the U. S. Ed. Millete Shamar and Jennifer Travis. New York: Columbia UP, 2002. 44-63. 2002.7 Cody, Michael. "Sleepwalking into the Nineteenth Century: Charles Brockden Brown's 'Somnambulism'." Journal of the Short Story in English 39. 41-55. 2002.8 Battistini, Robert Munn. "At the Limits of Enlightenment: Imaginative Prose in the Early Republic." DAI 62:12 A: 4162. 2002.9 Slawinski, Scott Paul. "Validating Bachelorhood: Audience, Patriarchy and Charles Brockden Brown's Editorship of the 'Monthly Magazine and American Review'." DAI 63:5 A: 1837. 2002.10 Lynch, Lisa. "The Fever Next Time: The Race of Disease and the Disease of Racism in John Edgar Wideman." American Literary History 14:4. 776-804. 2003. 1 Slawinski, Scott Paul. "Validating Bachelorhood: Audience, Patriarchy and Charles Brockden Brown's Editorship of the 'Monthly Magazine and American Review'." DAI 63:5 A 1837. 2003.2 Lynch, Lisa. "The Fever Next Time: The Race of Disease and the Disease of Racism in John Edgar Wideman." American Literary History 14:4. 776-804. 2003.3 Tattoni, Igina. "'There Was No Room for Hesitation': The Revolution of Time in Charles Brockden Brown's Arthur Mervyn: AISNA - Associazione Italiana di Studi NordAmericani, Proceedings of the Sixteenth Biennial International Conference: Genova, November 8-11, 2001" America and the Mediterranean.Ed. Massimo Bacigalupoand and Pierangelo Castagneto. Turin, Italy: Otto, 2003. 559-65. 2003.4 Goddu, Teresa A. "Historicizing the American Gothic: Charles Brockden Brown's Wieland." Approaches to Teaching Gothic Fiction: The British and American Traditions. Ed. Diane Long Hoeveler and Tamar Heller New York: Modern Language Association of America, 2003. 184-89. 2003.5 Alliata, Michela Vanon. "The Vertigo and the Abyss: Brown's Internalization of Gothic in Wieland and Edgar Huntley: Proceedings of the XV Biennial Conference Siracusa, November 4-7, 1999." America Today: Highways and Labyrinths. Ed. Gigliola Nocera. Siracusa, Italy: Grafià, 2003. 124-32. 2003.6 Hustis, Harriet. "Deliberate Unknowing and Strategic Retelling: The Ravages of Cultural Desire in Charles Brockden Brown's Edgar Huntly." Studies in American Fiction 31:1.101-20. 2003.7 Williams, Daniel E. "Writing under the Influence: An Examination of Wieland's 'Well Authenticated Facts' and the Depiction of Murderous Fathers in Post-Revolutionary Print Culture." Eighteenth-Century Fiction 15:3-4. 643-68. 2003.8 Bradshaw, Charles Callis. "Republican Aesthetics and the Discourse of Conspiracy in Federalist Literature." DAI 63:12. A 4310. 2003.9 Hepple, Christopher James. "The Politics of the Accusation in Anglo-American Romanticism." DAI 64:2. A 492. 2003.10 Waterman, Bryan. "Arthur Mervyn's Medical Repository and the Early Republic's Knowledge Industries." American Literary History 15:2. 213-47. 2003.11 Bradshaw, Charles C. "The England Illuminati: Conspiracy and Causality in Charles Brockden Brown's Wieland." New England Quarterly: A Historical Review of New England Life and Letters 76:3. 356-77. 2003.12 Strode, Timothy Francis. "The Ethics of Exile: Levinas, Colonialism, and the Fictional Forms of Charles Brockden Brown and J. M. Coetzee." DAI 64:6. A: 2080. 2004.1 Shuffelton, Frank. "Juries of the Common Reader: Crime and Judgment in the Novels of Charles Brockden Brown." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 88-114. 2004.2 Verhoeven, W. M. "'This Blissful Period of Intellectual Liberty': Transatlantic Radicalism and Enlightened Conservatism in Brown's Early Writings." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 740. 2004.3 Goudie, Sean X. "On the Origin of American Specie(s): The West Indies, Classification, and the Emergence of Supremacist Consciousness in Arthur Mervyn." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 60-87. 2004.4 White, Ed. "Carwin the Peasant Rebel." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 41-59. 2004.5 Kamrath, Mark L. "American Exceptionalism and Radicalism in the 'Annals of Europe and America'." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 354-84. 2004.6 Levine, Robert S. "Race and Nation in Brown's Louisiana Writings of 1803." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 332-53. 2004.7 Barnard, Philip. "Culture and Authority in Brown's Historical Sketches." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 310-31. 2004.8 Brückner, Martin. "Sense, Census, and the 'Statistical View' in the Literary Magazine and Jane Talbot." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 281-309. 2004.9 Burnham, Michelle. "Epistolarity, Anticipation, and Revolution in Clara Howard." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 260-280. 2004.10 Shapiro, Stephen. "'Man to Man I Needed Not to Dread His Encounter': Edgar Huntly's End of Erotic Pessimism." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 216-51. 2004.11 Stern, Julia. "The State of 'Women' in Ormond; or, Patricide in the New Nation." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 182-215. 2004.12 Teute, Fredrika J. "A 'Republic of Intellect': Conversation and Criticism among the Sexes in 1790s New York." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 149-81. 2004.13 Burgett, Bruce. "Malthus's Essay on the Principle of Population and Charles Brockden Brown's Alcuin." Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Ed. Philip Barnard, Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 122-48. 2004.14 Kafer, Peter. Charles Brockden Brown's Revolution and the Birth of American Gothic. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 2004. 2004.15 Barnard, Philip., Mark L. Kamrath, and Stephen Shapiro, eds. Revising Charles Brockden Brown: Culture, Politics, and Sexuality in the Early Republic. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 2004. 2004.16 Ostrowski, Carl. "'Fated to Perish by Consumption': The Political Economy of Arthur Mervyn." Studies in American Fiction 32:1. 3-20. 2004.17 Gibbons, Luke. "Ireland, America, and Gothic Memory: Transatlantic Terror in the Early Republic." Boundary 2: An International Journal of Literature and Culture 31:1. 25-47. 2004. 18 Dawes, James. "Fictional Feeling: Philosophy, Cognitive Science and the American Gothic." American Literature: A Journal of Literary History, Criticism, and Bibliography 76:3. 437-66.