Introduction: 'Thus Much I Adventure to Deliver to You': the Fortunes of George Gascoigne.Published in:Early Modern Literary Studies, 2008, v. 14, n. 1, p. 1By:Hamrick, StephenPublication type:Article
Self-portraits and Self-presentation in the Work of George Gascoigne.Published in:2008By:Austen, GillianPublication type:Literary Criticism
Cambridge, Spring 2008.Published in:Early Modern Literary Studies, 2008, v. 14, n. 1, p. 12Publication type:Article
'Nedelesse Singularitie': George Gascoigne's Strategies for Preserving Lyric Delight.Published in:2008By:Zarnowiecki, MatthewPublication type:Literary Criticism
Generating Bodies and Gendered Selves: The Rhetoric of Reproduction in Early Modern England.Published in:2008By:Luttfring, Sara D.Publication type:Book Review
The End of Learning: Milton and Education.Published in:2008By:Duran, AngelicaPublication type:Book Review
'Lyke Chaucers boye': Poetry and Penitence in Gascoigne's Grief of Joye.Published in:2008By:Laam, KevinPublication type:Literary Criticism
Gascoigne's Globe: The Spoyle of Antwerpe and the Black Legend of Spain.Published in:2008By:Salamon, Linda BradleyPublication type:Literary Criticism
"A true Copie": Gascoigne's Princely Pleasures and the textual representation of courtly performance.Published in:2008By:Anderson, SusanPublication type:Literary Criticism
The fruits of war: The voice of the soldier in Gascoigne, Rich, and Churchyard.Published in:2008By:Heale, ElizabethPublication type:Literary Criticism
'If the head be evill the body cannot be good': Legitimate Rebellion in Gascoigne and Kinwelmershe's Jocasta.Published in:2008By:Ward, Allyna E.Publication type:Literary Criticism