Politeness in eighteenth-century drama: a discursive approach.Published in:Journal of Politeness Research: Language, Behavior, Culture, 2016, v. 12, n. 1, p. 95, doi. 10.1515/pr-2015-0027By:Jucker, Andreas H.Publication type:Article
"I am my master's servant for hire": Contract and Identity in Richard Steele's The Conscious Lovers.Published in:2012By:Wolfram, NathaliePublication type:Literary Criticism
BEVIL'S EYES: OR, HOW CRYING AT THE CONSCIOUS LOVERS COULD SAVE BRITAIN.Published in:2012By:Wilson, Brett D.Publication type:Essay
Bringing the Other into View: Confronting the West Indian Creole in The Conscious Lovers and The West Indian.Published in:2011By:Donahue, JenniferPublication type:Literary Criticism
Monarchs, Morality and English Nationalism in the Comedies of Etheredge, Steele and Sheridan.Published in:Restoration & 18th Century Theatre Research, 2009, v. 24, n. 1, p. 31By:Geriguis, LoraPublication type:Article
(Re)Valuing the "Foreign Trinket": Sentimentalizing the Language of Economics in Steele's Conscious Lovers.Published in:Restoration & 18th Century Theatre Research, 2003, v. 18, n. 2, p. 11By:Horejsi, NicolePublication type:Article