AN EARLY SIXTEENTH-CENTURY COMMENT ON AUDIENCE REACTION TO THE IMPERSONATION OF DEVILS.Published in:Notes & Queries, 1984, v. 31, n. 2, p. 162, doi. 10.1093/nq/31-2-162By:Collins, MariePublication type:Article
"Affecting History": Impersonating Women in the Early Republic.Published in:2004By:Carroll, LorraynePublication type:Literary Criticism
Hiding in Plain Sight: The Satirist Who Wouldn't Be Seen.Published in:2016By:HOOLEY, DANPublication type:Literary Criticism
Should Nandan Be Abolished? The Debate over Female Impersonation in Early Republican China and Its Underlying Cultural Logic.Published in:2013By:Guanda WuPublication type:Essay
"I am not I": Philip Sidney and the Energy of Fiction (The Jan Van Dorsten Memorial Lecture, 2011).Published in:Sidney Journal, 2012, v. 30, n. 1, p. 1By:Stillman, Robert E.Publication type:Article
Complimenting traditions: Interview with Anuradha Kapur.Published in:Studies in South Asian Film & Media, 2013, v. 5, n. 1, p. 5, doi. 10.1386/safm.5.1.5_7By:Nair, SreenathPublication type:Article
“Heavenly War-Paint”: Mark Twain’s Courtship and His Suppressed Identity as a Southerner.Published in:Studies in English Literature / Eibungaku Kenkyu, 2016, n. 57, p. 41By:SUGIMURA AtsushiPublication type:Article
Constructing a Playful Space: Eight-Legged Essays on Xixiang ji and Pipa ji.Published in:2016By:Yinghui WuPublication type:Literary Criticism