The Review of English Studies Prize Essay‘It Ought not to be Lost to the World’: The Transmission and Consumption of Eighteenth-Century Lyric Verse.Published in:2011By:Batt, JenniferPublication type:Literary Criticism
Stephen Duck, the Thresher Poet.Published in:History Today, 1977, v. 27, n. 7, p. 467By:Paffard, MichaelPublication type:Article
Duck, Collier, and the Ideology of Verse Forms.Published in:SEL: Studies in English Literature (Johns Hopkins), 2004, v. 44, n. 3, p. 505, doi. 10.1353/sel.2004.0033By:Thompson, PeggyPublication type:Article
Georgic Transformations and Stephen Duck's 'The Thresher's Labour.'Published in:2001By:Keegan, BridgetPublication type:Poetry Review
From the Field to the Coffeehouse: Changing Representations of Stephen Duck.Published in:2005By:Batt, JenniferPublication type:Literary Criticism
Literary Technique, the Aestheticization of Laboring Experience, and Generic Experimentation in Stephen Duck's The Thresher's Labour.Published in:2005By:Van-Hagen, StevePublication type:Literary Criticism
Stephen Duck, Hoby Stanley and Sarah Stanley (Née Sloane).Published in:Notes & Queries, 2012, v. 59, n. 2, p. 216, doi. 10.1093/notesj/gjs005By:Batt, JenniferPublication type:Article
Working with Fluids in Mary Collier's "The Woman's Labour".Published in:Eighteenth Century: Theory & Interpretation, 2021, v. 62, n. 3/4, p. 313, doi. 10.1353/ecy.2023.a906889By:Todd, LilithPublication type:Article