Writing beyond Prophecy: Emerson, Hawthorne, and Melville after the American Renaissance.Published in:2013By:West, PeterPublication type:Book Review
Providential Fictions: Nathaniel Hawthorne's Secular Ethics.Published in:2013By:Weldon, RobertaPublication type:Book Review
Hawthorne's Habitations: A Literary Life.Published in:2013By:Greven, DavidPublication type:Book Review
Afterword: "A" is for Antinomian: Theology and Politics in "The Scarlet Letter."Published in:2013By:Coale, Samuel ChasePublication type:Book Review
Hawthorne's Serio-Comic Muse in "My Kinsman, Major Molineux."Published in:2013By:Piacentino, EdPublication type:Essay
Visualizing the Romance: Uses of Nathaniel Hawthorne's Narratives in Comics.Published in:2013By:Royal, Derek ParkerPublication type:Essay
Humor as Antithesis in "The House of the Seven Gables."Published in:2013By:Stephenson, MimosaPublication type:Literary Criticism
A Scribbling Woman's Rebuttal: Grace Greenwood Responds to the Hawthornes.Published in:2013By:Jones, Paul ChristianPublication type:Essay
Hawthorne's Backwoods Puritan: "Sir William Phips" and the Democratic Clown Tradition.Published in:2013By:Conway, JoePublication type:Essay
Comic Laughter in "The Blithedale Romance": Miles Coverdale and the Idea of the Gentleman Humorist.Published in:2013By:Caron, James E.Publication type:Essay
Humor in Hawthorne: Introduction.Published in:Nathaniel Hawthorne Review, 2013, v. 39, n. 2, p. 1By:Inge, M. ThomasPublication type:Article
"Legitimate Strokes of Humor" in Hawthorne's Early Picaresque Tales.Published in:2013By:Petersheim, StevenPublication type:Essay