Selected Bibliography for English 572:  The Brontës
 

Abel, Elizabeth, Marianne Hirsch, Elizabeth Langland, eds.  The Voyage In:  Fictions of Female Development.  Hanover, London: UP of New England, 1983.

Alexander, Christine.  The Early Writings of Charlotte Brontë.  Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1983.

---.  "Milestones in Brontë Textual Scholarship."  Text:  An Interdiscliplinary Journal of Textual Studies 9 (1996): 353-68.

---.  "'That Kingdom of Gloom':  Charlotte Brontë, the Annuals, and the Gothic."  Nineteenth-Century Literature 47 (1993): 409-36.

Alexander, Christine and Jane Sellars.  The Art of the Brontës.  Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1995.

Ardholm, Helena M.  The Emblem and the Emblematic Habit of Mind in Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights.  Goteborg, Sweden: Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis, 1999.

Argyle, Gisela.  "Gender and Generic Mixing in Charlotte Brontë's Shirley."  Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 35 (1995): 741-56.

Armstrong Nancy.  Desire and Domestic Fiction.  NY: Oxford UP, 1987.

---..  "Emily Brontë In and Out of Her Time."  Genre 15 (1982): 243-64.

---.  "Imperialist Nostalgia and Wuthering Heights." Wuthering Heights: Complete, Authoritative Text with Biographical and Historical Contexts, Critical History, and Essays from Five Contemporary Critical Perspectives.  Ed. Linda H. Peterson.  Boston: Bedford, 1992

Atkins, Elizabeth.  "Jane Eyre Transformed."  Literature/ Film Quarterly 21 (1993): 54-60.

Auerbach, Nina.  Comunities of Women:  An Idea in Fiction.  Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP, 1978.

Bailin, Miriam.  "'Varieties of Pain':  The Victorian Sickroom and Brontë's Shirley."  Modern Language Quarterly 48 (1987): 254-78.

Baldridge, Cates.  "Voyeuristic Rebellion:  Lockwood's Dream and the Reader of Wuthering Heights."  Studies in the Novel 20 (1988): 274-87.

Barnard, Robert.  "Dickens and the Brontës." Brontë Society Transactions 25 (2000): 109-20.

Barreca, Regina.  "The Power of Excommunication:  Sex and the Feminine Text in Wuthering Heights."  Sex and Death in Victorian Literature.  Ed. Regina Barreca.  Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1990.

Beattie, Valerie.  "The Mystery at Thornfield:  Representations of Madness in Jane Eyre."  Studies in the Novel 28 (1996): 493-505.

Beaty, Jerome.  "Jane Eyre Cubed:  The Three Dimensions of the Text."  Narrative 4 (1996): 74-92.

---. Misreading Jane Eyre:  A Postformalist Paradigm.  Columbus: Ohio State UP, 1996.

Beer, Patricia.  Reader, I Married Him:  A Study of the Women Characters of Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë, Elizabeth Gaskell, and George Eliot.  London: Macmillan, 1974.

Bellis, Peter J.  "In the Window-Seat:  Vision and Power in Jane Eyre."  English Literary History 54 (1987): 639-52.

Berg, Maggie.  Jane Eyre:  Portrait of a Life.  Boston: Twayne, 1987.

---.  Wuthering Heights:  The Writing in the Margin.  NY: Twayne; London: Prentice Hall, 1996.

Berg, Margaret Mary.  "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall:  Anne Brontë's Jane Eyre."  Victorian Newsletter 71 (1987): 10-15.

Berman, Jeffrey.  Narcissism and the Novel.  NY, London: New York UP, 1990.

Berry, Elizabeth Hollis.  Anne Brontë's Radical Vision:  Structures of Consciousness.  Victoria, B. C.: U of Victoria, 1994.

Berry, Laura C.  "Acts of Custody and Incarceration in Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."  Novel:  A Forum on Fiction 30 (1996): 32-55.

Betsinger, Sue Ann.  "Jane Eyre:  The Ascent of Woman."  Gender, Culture, and the Arts:  Women, the Arts, and Society.  Ed. Ronald Dotterer, Susan Bowers.  Selinsgrove; London: Susquehanna UP; Associated UP, 1993.

Björk, Harriet.  The Language of Truth:  Charlotte Brontë, the Woman Question, and the Novel.  Lund: C W K Gleerup, 1974.

Blake, Kathleen.  "Review of Brontë Studies:  1981-1987."  Dickens Studies Annual:  Essays on Victorian Fiction 18 (1989): 381-402.

Blom, Margaret Howard.  Charlotte Brontë.  Boston: Twayne, 1977.

Bloom, Harold, ed.  Heathcliff.  New York: Chelsea House, 1992.

Bock, Carol A.  "Gender and Poetic Tradition:  The Shaping of Charlotte Brontë's Literary Career."  Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 7 (1988): 49-67.

---.  "Storytelling and the Multiple Audiences of Shirley."  Journal of Narrative Technique 18 (1988): 226-42.

Boone, Joseph Allen.  Tradition Counter Tradition:  Love and the Form of Fiction.  Chicago, London: U of  Chicago P, 1987.

Boone, Joseph A. and Deborah E. Nord.  "Brother and Sister:  The Seduction of Siblinghood in Dickens, Eliot, and Brontë."  Western Humanities Review 46 (1992): 164-88.

Boumelha, Penny.  Charlotte Brontë.  Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1990.

Breen, Margaret Soenser.  "Who Are You, Lucy Snowe?  Disoriented Bildung in Villette."  Dickens Studies Annual 24 (1996): 241-57.

Brinton, Laurel J.  "The Historical Present in Charlotte Brontë's Novels:  Some Discourse Functions."  Style 26 (1992): 221-44.

Bronfen, Elisabeth.  "Femininity:  Missing in Action." Jane Eyre.  Ed. Heather Glen.  NY: St. Martin's (1997): 196-204.

Brontë, Anne.  The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.  Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1979.

Brontë, Charlotte.  An Edition of the Early Writings of Charlotte Brontë, II:  The Rise of Angria, 1833-1835.  Ed. Christine Alexander.  Oxford: Blackwell, 1991.

---. Charlotte Brontë's High Life in Verdopolis: A Story from the Glass Town Saga.  Ed. Christine Alexander.  London: British Library, 1995

---.  Jane Eyre.  Oxford: Oxford UP, 1975.

---.  Jane Eyre:  Complete, Authoritative Text with Biographical and Historical Contexts, Critical History, and Essays from Five Contemporary Critical Perspectives.  Boston: Bedford Books of St. Martin's P, 1996.

---.  The Poems of Charlotte Brontë:  A New Annotated and Enlarged Edition of the Shakespeare Head Brontë.  Ed. Tom Winnifreth.  Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1984.

---.  The Poems of Charlotte Brontë:  A New Text and Commentary.  Ed. Victor A. Neufeld.  NY, London: Garland, 1985.

---.  Shirley.  Oxford: Oxford UP, 1981.

---.  Villette.  Harmonsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1979.

Brontë, Emily.  Selected Poems.  Ed. Juliet R. V. Barker. London: Dent; Rutland, VT: Tuttle, 1985.

---.  Wuthering Heights.  Oxford: Oxford UP, 1981.

---.  Wuthering Heights and Poems.  Ed. Philip Henderson.  London: Dent; Rutland, VT: Tuttle, 1991.

---.  Wuthering Heights:  Authoritative Text, Backgrounds, Criticism.  Ed. William M. Sale and Richard J. Dunn.  3rd ed.  NY: Norton, 1990.

---. Wuthering Heights: Complete, Authoritative Text with Biographical and Historical Contexts, Critical History, and Essays from Five Contemporary Critical Perspectives.  Ed. Linda H. Peterson.  Boston: Bedford, 1992.

Brown, Ellen.  "Between the Medusa and the Abyss:  Reading Jane Eyre, Reading Myself."  The Intimate Critique:  Autobiographical Literary Criticism.  Ed. Diane P. Freedman, Olivia Frey, Frances Murphy Zauhar.  Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1993.

Burkhart, Charles.  Charlotte Brontë:  A Psychosexual Study of Her Novels.  London: Victor Gollancz, 1973.

Burns, Marjorie.  "'The Shattered Prison':  Versions of Eden in Wuthering Heights."  The Nineteenth-Century British Novel.  Ed. Jeremy Hawthorn.  Baltimore: Arnold, 1986.

Campbell, Ian.  "The Brontës' Appeal."  Brontë Society Transactions 25 (2000): 1-8.

Carlton-Ford, Cynthia.  "Intimacy without Immolation:  Fire in Jane Eyre."  Women's Studies:  An Interdisciplinary Journal 15 (1988): 375-86.

Carnell, Rachel K.  "Feminism and the Public Sphere in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."  Nineteenth-Century Literature 53 (1998): 1-24.

Chaplin, Sue. "Memory, Imagination and the (M)Other: An Irigarayan Reading of Charlotte Brontë's Villette." Body Matters: Feminism, Textuality, Corporeality.  Eds. Avril Horner and Angela Keane.  Manchester, England: Manchester UP: 2000: 225-33.

Chase, Karen.  Eros & Psyche:  The Representation of Personality in Charlotte Brontë, Charles Dickens, and George Eliot.  NY, London: Methuen, 1984.

---.  "Jane Eyre's Interior Design." Jane Eyre.  Ed. Heather Glen.  NY: St. Martin's (1997): 52-67.

Cheng, Anne A.  "Reading Lucy Snowe's Cryptology:  Charlotte Brontë's Villette and Suspended Mourning."  Qui Parle 4 (1991): 75-90.

Chichester, Teddi Lynn.  "Evading 'Earth's Dungeon Tomb':  Emily Brontë, A. G. A., and the Fatally Feminine."  Victorian Poetry 29 (1991): 1-15.

Ciolkowski, Laura E.  "Charlotte Bronte's Villette: Forgeries of Sex and Self."  Studies in the Novel 26 (1994): 218-34.

Chitham, Edward.  A Life of Emily Brontë.  Oxford, NY: Basil Blackwell, 1987.

Chitham, Edward and Tom Winnifreth, eds.  Selected Brontë Poems.  Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1985.

Clark-Beattie, Rosemary.  "Fables of Rebellion:  Anti-Catholicism and the Structure of Villette."  English Literary History 53 (1986): 821-47.

Clarke, Micael M. "Brontë's Jane Eyre and the Grimms' Cinderella."  Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 40 (2000): 695-710.

Cohen, Paula Marantz.  The Daughter's Dilemma:  Family Process and the Nineteenth-Century Domestic Novel.  Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 1991.

Craig, Randall.  "Logophobia in Jane Eyre."  Journal of Narrative Technique 23 (1993): 92-113.

Craik, W. A.  The Brontë Novels.  London: Methuen, 1968.

---. "The Brontës." New History of Literature, VI:  The Victorians.  Ed. Arthur Pollard.  NY: Bedrick, 1987.

Crump, R. W.  Charlotte and Emily Brontë 1955-1983:  A Reference Guide.  Boston:     G. K. Hall, 1986.

Dale, Peter Allan.  "Charlotte Brontë's 'Tale Half-Told':  The Disruption of Narrative Structure in Jane Eyre."  Jane Eyre.  Ed. Heather Glen.  NY: St. Martin's (1997): 205-26.

---.  "Varieties of Blasphemy:  Feminism and the Brontës."  Review 14 (1992): 281-304.

Dames, Nicholas.  "The Clinical Novel:  Phrenology and Villette."  Novel:  A Forum on Fiction 29 (1996): 367-90.

Davies, Stevie.  Emily Brontë:  The Artist as a Free Woman.  Manchester: Carcanet, 1983.

---.  "Recent Studies of the Brontës."  Critical Quarterly 27 (1985):  35-40.

Dawson, Terrence.  "The Struggle for Deliverance from the Father:  The Structural Principle of Wuthering Heights."  Modern Language Review 84 (1989): 289-304.

Dolin, Tim.  "Fictional Territory and a Woman's Place: Regional and Sexual Difference in Shirley." English Literary History 62 (1995): 197-215.

Downing, Crystal.  "Hieroglyphics (De)Constructed:  Interpreting Brontë Fictions."  Lit:  Literature-Interpretation-Theory 2 (1991): 261-73.

---.  "Unheimliche Heights:  The (En)Gendering of Brontë Sources.  Texas Studies in Literature and Language 40 (1998): 347-69.

Dupras, Joseph A.  "Charlotte Brontë's Shirley and Interpretive Engendering."  Papers on Language and Literature 24 (1988): 301-16.

Eagleton, Terry.  Myths of Power:  A Marxist Study of the Brontës.  2nd ed.  London: Macmillan, 1988.

Edwards, Mike.  Charlotte Brontë:  The Novels.  NY: St. Martin's P, 1999.

Farr, Judith.  "Charlotte Brontë, Emily Brontë, and the 'Undying Life' Within."  Victorians Institute Journal 17 (1989): 87-101.

Farrell, John P.  "Reading the Text of Community in Wuthering Heights."  English Literary History 56 (1989): 173-208.

Federico, Annette.  ''A Cool Observer of Her Own Sex Like Me':  Girl-Watching in Jane Eyre."  Victorian Newsletter 80 (1991): 29-33.

Ferguson, Susan L.  "Drawing Fictional Lines:  Dialect and Narrative in the Victorian Novel."  Style (32) 1998: 1-17.

Figes, Eva.  Sex and Subterfuge:  Women Novelists to 1850.  London, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1982.

Fimland, Marit.  "On the Margins of the Acceptable:  Charlotte Brontë's Villette."  Literature and Theology 10 (1996): 148-59.

Fleenor, Juliann E., ed.  The Female Gothic.  Montreal, London: Eden P, 1983.

Fletcher, Luann McCracken.  "Manufactured Marvels, Heretic Narratives, and the Process of Interpretation in Villette."  Studies in English Literature 32 (1992): 723-46.

Forsyth, Beverly.  "The Two Faces of Lucy Snowe:  A Study in Deviant Behavior."  Studies in the Novel 29 (1997): 17-25.

Fraiman, Susan.  Unbecoming Women:  British Women Writers and the Novel of Development.  NY: Columbia UP, 1993.

Francis, Emma.  "Is Emily Brontë a Woman?:  Femininity, Feminism, and the Paranoid Critical Subject."  Subjectivity and Literature from the Romantics to the Present Day.  Ed. Philip Shaw, Peter Stockwell.  London: Pinter, 1991.

Franklin, J. Jeffrey.  "The Merging of Spiritualites: Jane Eyre as Missionary of Love."  Nineteenth-Century Literature 49 (1995): 456-82.

Freeman, Janet.  "Looking on at Life:  Objectivity and Intimacy in Villette."  Philological Quarterly 67 (1988): 481-511.

---.  "Unity and Diversity in Shirley."  Journal of English and Germanic Philology 87 (1988): 558-75.

Frith, Gail.  "Women, Writing and Language:  Making the Silences Speak."  Thinking Feminist:  Key Concepts in Women's Studies.  Ed. Diane Richardson, Victoria Robinson.  NY: Guilford, 1993.

Galef, David.  "Keeping One's Distance:  Irony and Doubling in Wuthering Heights."  Studies in the Novel 24 (1992): 242-50.

Gallagher, H. W.  "The Death of Charlotte Brontë."  Brontë Society Transactions 20 (1992): 329-30.

Gaskell, Elizabeth.  The Life of Charlotte Brontë.  London: Penguin, 1985.

Gates, Barbara Timm, ed.  Critical Essays on Charlotte Brontë.  Boston: G.K. Hall, 1990.

Gavin, Adrienne E. "Apparition and Apprehension: Supernatural Mystery and Emergent Womanhood in Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights, and Novels by Margaret Mahy." Mystery in Children's Literature: From the Rational to the Supernatural. Eds. Adrienne E. Gavin and Christopher Routledge. Houndmills, England: Palgrave, 2001: 131-148.

Gérin, Winifred.  Anne Brontë.  London: Thomas Nelson, 1959.

---.  Emily Brontë:  A Biography.  Oxford, NY, Melbourne: Oxford UP, 1978.

Gezari, Janet.  Charlotte Brontë and Defensive Conduct:  The Author and the Body at Risk.  Philadelphia:  U of Pennsylvania P, 1992.

Gilbert, Sandra M. and Susan Gubar.  The Madwoman in the Attic:  The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination.  New Haven, London:  Yale UP, 1979.

Gilead, Sarah.  "Liminality and Antiliminality in Charlotte Brontë's Novels:  Shirley Reads Jane Eyre."  Texas Studies in Literature and Language 29 (1987): 302-22.

Gill, Linda. "The Unpardonable Sin: Lockwood's Dream in Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights." Victorians Institute Journal 28 (2000): 97-108.

Goetz, William R.  "Genealogy and Incest in Wuthering Heights."  Studies in the Novel 14 (1982): 359-76.

Goodheart, Eugene.  "Family Incest and Transcendence in Wuthering Heights."  Explorations:  The Nineteenth Century.  Ed. Ann B. Dobie.  Lafayette, LA: Levy Humanities Service, 1988.

Gordon, Jan B.  "Gossip, Diary, Letter, Text:  Anne Brontë's Narrative Tenant and the Problematic of the Gothic Sequel."  English Literary History 51 (1984): 719-45.

Gordon, Lyndall.  Charlotte Brontë: A Passionate Life.  NY: Norton, 1994.

Gordon, Marci M.  "Kristeva's Abject and Sublime in Brontë's Wuthering Heights."  Literature and Psychology 34 (1988): 44-58.

Greene, Sally.  "Apocalypse When? Shirley's Vision and the Politics of Reading."  Studies in the Novel (1994): 350-71.

Grove, Robin.  "The Poor Man's Daughter's Tale:  Narrative and System in Wuthering Heights."  The Critical Review 36 (1996): 32-40.

Grudin, Peter D.  "Jane and the Other Mrs. Rochester:  Excess and Restraint in Jane Eyre."  Novel 10 (1977): 145-57.

---.  "Wuthering Heights:  The Question of Unquiet Slumbers."  Studies in the Novel 6 (1974): 389-407.

Gruner, Elisabeth Rose.  "'Loving Difference':  Sisters and Brothers from Frances Burney to Emily Brontë.  The Significance of Sibling Relationships in Literature.  Ed. JoAnna Stephens Mink, Janet Doubler Ward.  Bowling Green, OH: Popular, 1992.

---.  "Plotting the Mother: Caroline Norton, Helen Huntingdon, and Isabel Vane."  Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 16 (1997): 303-25.

Hafley, James.  "The Villain in Wuthering Heights."  Nineteenth-Century Fiction 13 (1958): 199-215.

Haggerty, George E.  Gothic Fiction/Gothic Form.  University Park, London: Pennsylvania State UP, 1989.

Hague, Angela.  "Charlotte Brontë and Intuitive Consciousness."  Texas Studies in Literature and Language 32 (1990): 584-601.

Halperin, John.  Egoism and Self-Discovery in the Victorian Novel:  Studies in the Ordeal of Knowledge in the Nineteenth Century.  NY: Burt Franklin, 1974.

Helfield, Randa.  "Confession as Cover-Up in Brontë's Villette."  English Studies in Canada 23 (1997): 59-72.

Hennelly, Mark M., Jr.  "'In a State Between': A Reading of Liminality in Jane Eyre."  Victorian Literature and Culture 22 (1994): 103-27.

Hewish, John.  Emily Brontë:  A Critical and Biographical Study.  London: Macmillan, St. Martin's Press, 1969.

Hinton, Laura.  The Perverse Gaze of Sympathy:  Sadomasochistic Sentiments from Clarissa to Rescue 911.  Albany: State University of New York P, 1999.

Hirota, Minoru.  "A Study of Anne Brontë:  Her Moralistic Mind and its Development."  Studies in English Language and Literature 38 (1988): 43-69.

Hirsch, Marianne.  "Jane's Family Romances."  Borderwork:  Feminist Engagements with Comparative Literature.  Ed. Margaret R. Higonnet.  Ithaca: Cornell UP, 1994.

Hoddinott, Alison. "The Endings of Charlotte Brontë's Novels."  Brontë Society Transactions 25 (2000): 31-41.

Hoeveler, Diane Long and Beth Lau, eds.  Approaches to Teaching Brontë's Jane Eyre.  NY: Modern Language Association of America (1993).

Hogan, Anne. "'Reading Men More Truly': Charlotte Brontë's Villette." Masculinity and Spirituality in Victorian Culture.  Eds. Andrew Bradstock, Sean Gill, Anne Hogan, and Sue Morgan. Houndmills, England, NY: Macmillan, St. Martin's, 2000: 58-70.

Holbrook, David.  Wuthering Heights:  A Drama of Being.  Sheffield, England: Sheffield Academic Press, 1997.

Homans, Margaret.  Bearing the Word:  Language and Female Experience in Nineteenth-Century Women's Writing.  Chicago, London: U of Chicago P, 1986.

---.  "Dreaming of Children:  Literalisation in Jane Eyre." Jane Eyre.  Ed. Heather Glen.  NY: St. Martin's (1997):  147-67.

---.  "Repression and Sublimation of Nature in Wuthering Heights."  PMLA 93 (1978): 9-19.

Hughes, John.  "The Affective World of Charlotte Brontë's Villette."  Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 40 (2000): 711-26.

Imlay, Elizabeth.  Charlotte Brontë and the Mysteries of Love:  Myth and Allegory in Jane Eyre.  NY: St. Martin's Press, 1989.

Jackson, Arlene M.  "The Question of Credibility in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."  English Studies:  A Journal of English Language and Literature 63 (1982): 198-206.

Jacobs, Carol. Uncontainable Romanticism: Shelley, Brontë, Kleist.  Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1989.

---.  "Wuthering Heights at the Threshold of Intepretation."  Gendered Agents:  Women and Institutional Knowledge.  Eds. Silvestra Mariniello and Paul Bove.  Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1998: 371-95.

Jacobs, N. M.  "Gender and Layered Narrative in Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."  Journal of Narrative Technique 16 (1986): 204-19.

Jay, Betty.  Anne Brontë.  Plymouth: Northcote House, 1999.

Jedrzejewski, Jan. "Charlotte Brontë and Roman Catholicism." Brontë Society Transactions 25 (2000): 121-35.

Johnson, Freya.  "The Male Gaze and the Struggle Against Patriarchy in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea."  Jean Rhys Review 5 (1992): 22-30.

Johnson, Patricia E.  "Charlotte Brontë and Desire (to Write): Pleasure, Power, and Prohibition." Anxious Power:  Reading, Writing, and Ambivalence in Narrative by Women.  Eds. Carol J. Singley and Susan Elizabeth Sweeney.  Albany: State U of New York P, 1993.

---.  "'This Heretic Narrative':  The Strategy of the Split Narrative in Charlotte Brontë's Villette."  Studies in English Literature 30 (1990): 617-31.

Johnston, Ruth D.  "Dis-Membrance of Things Past: Re-Vision of Wordsworthian Retrospection in Jane Eyre and Villette."  Victorian Literature and Culture 22 (1994): 73-102.

Jones, Robin.  "The Goblin Ha-Ha:  Hidden Smiles and Open Laughter in Jane Eyre." New Perspectives on Women and Comedy.  Ed. Regina Barreca.  Philadelphia: Gordon and Breach, 1992.

Kahane, Claire.  "The Aesthetic Politics of Rage."  Lit:  Literature-Interpretation-Theory  3 (1991): 19-31.

Kaplan, Carla.  "Girl Talk:  Jane Eyre and the Romance of Women's Narration."  Novel:  A Forum on Fiction 30 (1996): 5-31.

---. The Erotics of Talk:  Women's Writing and Feminist Paradigms.  NY: Oxford UP, 1996.

Kavaler-Adler, Susan.  "Charlotte Brontë and the Feminine Self."  The American Journal of Psychoanalysis 50 (1990): 37-43.

Kavanaugh, James H.  Emily Brontë.  Oxford, NY: Basil Blackwell, 1985.

Kaye, Richard A.  "A Good Woman on Five Thousand Pounds: Jane Eyre, Vanity Fair, and Literary Rivalry."  Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 35 (1995): 723-39.

Kazan, Francesca.  "Heresy, the Image, and Description; or, Picturing the Invisible:  Charlotte Brontë's Villette."  Texas Studies in Literature and Language 32 (1990): 543-66.

Keen, Suzanne.  "Narrative Annexes in Charlotte Brontë's Shirley."  Journal of Narrative Technique 20 (1990): 107-19.

Kelly, Mary Ann.  "Paralysis and the Circular Nature of Memory in Villette."  Journal of English and Germanic Philology 90 (1991): 342-60.

Kemp, Melody. "Helen's Diary and the Method(ism) of Character Formation in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall." New Approaches to the Literary Art of Anne Brontë.  Eds. Julie Nash and Barbara A. Suess. Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 2001: 195-211.

Kendrick, Robert.  "Edward Rochester and the Margins of Masculinity in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea."  Papers on Language and Literature 30 (1994): 235-56.

Knapp, Bettina L.  The Brontës:  Branwell, Anne, Emily, Charlotte.  NY: Continuum, 1991.

Knezevic, Borislav.  "The Impossible Things:  Quest for Knowledge in Charlotte Brontë's Villette."  Literature and Psychology 42 (1996): 65-99.

Knoepflmacher, U. C.  Wuthering Heights:  A Study.  Athens, OH: Ohio UP, 1994.

Kostka, Edith A.  "Narrative Experience as a Means to Maturity in Anne Brontë's Victorian Novel ,The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."  Connecticut Review 14 (1992): 41-47.

Kucich, John.  "Passionate Reserve and Reserved Passion in the Works of Charlotte Brontë."  English Literary History 52 (1985): 913-37.

---. Repression in Victorian Fiction:  Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, and Charles Dickens.  Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: U of California P, 1987.

Kushen, Betty.  "Volition and the Repetition Compulsion in Charlotte Brontë's Villette."  Journal of Evolutionary Psychology 17 (1996): 64-73.

Lane, Margaret.  The Drug-Like Brontë Dream.  London: Murray, 1980.

Langer, Nancy Quick.  "'There Is No Such Ladies Now-a-days':  Capsizing 'the Patriarch Bull in Charlotte Brontë's Shirley."  Journal of Narrative Technique: 27 (1997): 276-96.

Langland, Elizabeth.  Anne Brontë:  The Other One.  Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire and London: Macmillan, 1989.

---.  "The Voicing of Feminine Desire in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."  Gender and Discourse in Victorian Literature and Art.  Ed. Antony H. Harrison, Beverly Taylor.  DeKalb: Northern Illinois UP, 1992.

Larson, Janet L.  "'Who Is Speaking?':  Charlotte Brontë's Voices of Prophecy."  Victorian Sages and Cultural Discourse:  Renegotiating Gender and Power.  Ed. Thais E. Morgan.  New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1990.

Laurence, Patricia.  "Women's Silence as a Ritual of Truth:  A Study of Literary Expressions in Austen, Brontë, and Woolf."  Listening to Silences:  New Essays in Feminist Criticism.  Ed. Elaine Hedges, Shelley Fisher Fishkin.  NY: Oxford UP, 1994.

Lawrence, Karen.  "The Cypher:  Disclosure and Reticence in Villette."  Tradition and the Talents of Women.  Ed. Florence Howe.  Urbana: U of Illinois P, 1991.

Lawson, Kate.  "The Dissenting Voice:  Shirley's Vision of Women and Christianity."  Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 29 (1989): 729-43.

---.  "Imagining Eve: Charlotte Bronte, Kate Millett, Helene Cixous."  Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 24 (1995): 411-26.

---.  "Reading Desire:  Villette as Heretic Narrative."  English Studies in Canada 17 (1991): 53-71.

Lenta, Margaret.  "Capitalism or Patriarchy and Immortal Love:  A Study of 'Wuthering Heights.’"  Theoria 62 (1984): 63-75.

Levine, Caroline. "'Harmless Pleasure': Gender, Suspense, and Jane Eyre." Victorian Literature and Culture 28 (2000): 275-86.

Levy, Anita.  "Blood, Kinship, and Gender."  Genders 5 (1989): 70-85.

---. "Public Spaces, Private Eyes: Gender and the Social Work of Aesthetics in Charlotte Brontë's Villette."  Nineteenth-Century Contexts 22 (2000): 391-416.

---. Reproductive Urges:  Popular Novel-Reading, Sexuality, and the English Nation.  Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 1999.

Levy, Eric P.  "The Psychology of Loneliness in Wuthering Heights."  Studies in the Novel 28 (1996): 158-77.

London, Bette.  "The Pleasures of Submission:  Jane Eyre and the Production of the Text."  English Literary History 58 (1991): 195-213.

---.  "Wuthering Heights and the Text Between the Lines."  Papers on Language and Literature 24 (1988): 34-52.

Lonoff, Sue.  "An Unpublished Memoir by Paul Heger."  Brontë Society Transactions 20 (1992): 344-48.

Lonoff, Sue, ed.  The Belgian Essays:  Charlotte Brontë and Emily Brontë.  New Haven, CT: Yale UP, 1996.

Lopez, Andres G.  "Wildfell Hall as Satire: Brontë's Domestic Vanity Fair." New Approaches to the Literary Art of Anne Brontë.  Eds. Julie Nash and Barbara A. Suess. Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 2001: 173-94.

Lundberg, Patricia Lorimer.  "The Dialogic Search for Community in Charlotte Brontë's Novels."  Journal of Narrative Technique 20 (1990): 296-317.

MacGregor, Catherine.  "'I Cannot Trust Your Oaths and Promises:  I Must Have a Written Agreement':  Talk and Text in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."  Dionysos:  The Literature and Addiction TriQuarterly 4 (1992): 31-39.

Macovski, Michael S.  "Wuthering Heights and the Rhetoric of Interpretation."  English Literary History 54 (1987): 363-84.

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Moser, Thomas.  "What is the Matter with Emily Jane?  Conflicting Impulses in Wuthering Heights."  Nineteenth-Century Fiction 17 (1962): 1-19.

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Nash, Julie and Barbara A. Suess, eds. New Approaches to the Literary Art of Anne Brontë. Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 2001.

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Peters, Joan D.  "Finding a Voice:  Towards a Woman's Discourse of Dialogue in the Narration of Jane Eyre."  Studies in the Novel 23 (1991): 217-36.

Peters, John G.  "Inside and Outside:  Jane Eyre and Marginalization Through Labeling."  Studies in the Novel 28 (1996): 57-75.

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Poovey, Mary and Catherine R. Stimpson.  Uneven Developments:  The Ideological Work of Gender in Mid-Victorian England.  Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1988.

Pratt, Linda Ray.  "'I Shall Be Your Father':  Heathcliff's Narrative of Paternity."  Victorians Institute Journal 20 (1992): 13-38.

Prentis, Barbara.  The Brontë Sisters and George Eliot:  A Unity of Difference.  London: Macmillan, 1988.

Preston, Elizabeth.  "Relational Reconsiderations: Reliability, Heterosexuality, and Narrative Authority in Villette."  Style 30 (1996): 386-408.

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Qualls, Barry V.  "'Speak What We Think':  The Brontës and Women Writers."  The Columbia History of the British Novel.  Ed. John Richetti, John Bender, Deirdre David, Michael Seidel.  NY: Columbia UP, 1994.

Rabinowitz, Nancy Sorkin.  "'Faithful Narrator' or 'Partial Eulogist':  First-Person Narration in Brontë's Villette."  Journal of Narrative Technique 15 (1985): 244-55.

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Rigney, Barbara Hill.  Madness and Sexual Politics in the Feminist Novel:  Studies in Brontë, Woolf, Lessing, and Atwood.  Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 1978.

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Sadoff, Dianne F.  Monsters of Affection:  Dickens, Eliot & Brontë on Fatherhood.  Baltimore, London: Johns Hopkins UP, 1982.

Schacht, Paul.  "Jane Eyre and the History of Self-Respect."  Modern Language Quarterly 52 (1991): 423-53.

Schapiro, Barbara.  "The Rebirth of Cathering Earnshaw:  Splitting and Reintegration of Self in Wuthering Heights."  Nineteenth-Century Studies 3 (1989): 37-51.

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Schwartz, Nina.  "No Place Like Home:  The Logic of the Supplement in Jane Eyre."  Charlotte Brontë:  Jane Eyre.  Ed. Beth Newman.  Boston: Bedford, 1996: 549-64.

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Sternlieb, Lisa.  "Jane Eyre: 'Hazarding Confidences.'" Jane Eyre: An Authoritative Text, Contexts, Criticism. Ed. Richard J. Dunn. NY: Norton, 2000: 503-15.

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Stoneman, Patsy.  Brontë Transformations:  The Cultural Dissemination of Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights.  London, NY: Prentice Hall/Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1996.

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---.  "Jane Eyre as Mirror and Monster: Intertextual Strategies in Women's Self-Representation."  The Representation of the Self in Women's Autobiography.  Ed. Vita Fortunati and Gabriella Morisco.  Bologna: Univ. of Bologna, 1993.

Sutherland, Kathryn.  "Jane Eyre's Literary History:  The Case for Mansfield Park."  English Literary History 59 (1992): 409-40.

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Tayler, Irene.  Holy Ghosts:  The Male Muses of Emily and Charlotte Brontë.  NY: Columbia UP, 1990.

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Zare, Bonnie.  Jane Eyre's Excruciating Ending.  College Language Association Journal 37 (1993): 204-20.

Zonana, Joyce.  "The Sultan and the Slave:  Feminist Orientalism and the Structures of Jane Eyre."  Signs:  Journal of Women in Culture and Society 18 (1993): 592-617.
 
 

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