"Quite pretty and natural!": Theatricality in Eighteenth-Century Women's Writing.Published in:2010By:Cook, Elizabeth HeckendornPublication type:Book Review
Enlightenment and the Writing Self in Eighteenth-Century Britain.Published in:2010By:Schellenberg, Betty A.Publication type:Book Review
A True Account of the Design, and Advantages of the South-Sea Trade: Profits, Propaganda, and the Peace Preliminaries of 1711.Published in:2010By:Bialuschewski, ArnePublication type:Essay
Dean Wren's Religio Medici: Reading in Civil War England.Published in:2010By:Barbour, ReidPublication type:Literary Criticism
"A Prophet and a Poet Both!": Nonconformist Culture and the Literary Afterlives of Robert Wild.Published in:Huntington Library Quarterly, 2010, v. 73, n. 2, p. 249, doi. 10.1525/hlq.2010.73.2.249By:Southcombe, GeorgePublication type:Article
Fit Words at the "pitts brinke": The Achievement of Elizabeth Isham.Published in:2010By:Cotterill, AnnePublication type:Literary Criticism
Reconsidering Early Modern Women's Reading, or, How Margaret Hoby Read Her de Mornay.Published in:2010By:Crawford, JuliePublication type:Essay
Upstairs, Downstairs: Doctrine and Decorum in Two Sermons by John Donne.Published in:2010By:Colclough, DavidPublication type:Literary Criticism