Gender, Translation, and Eighteenth-Century Women Dramatists: Elizabeth Griffith's The School for Rakes (1769) and María Lorenza de los Ríos y Loyo's El Eugenio (1801).Published in:2015By:Jaffe, Catherine M.;Yague, Elisa Martin-ValdepenasPublication type:Literary Criticism
FROM LONDON TO PIHLADELPIHA: THE MISATTRIBUTION OF ELIZABETH GRIFFITH'S ESSAYS, ADDRESSED TO YOUNG MARRIED WOMEN (1782).Published in:Notes & Queries, 1989, v. 36, n. 4, p. 480, doi. 10.1093/nq/36-4-480By:Massefski, Heidi MintzPublication type:Article
Consumption and Gender in the Early Seventeenth-Century Household. The World of Alice Le Strange.Published in:2013By:De Roo, TomPublication type:Book Review
The Cutting of Sir Harry Granger: Scandal and Politics in the Drury Lane Production of Elizabeth Griffith's The Times.Published in:2012By:Jones, Robert W.Publication type:Essay
"Open[ing] the Flood-gate of literature to her own Sex": Elizabeth Griffith, translation, transmission, and cultural transfer.Published in:Women's Writing, 2020, v. 27, n. 2, p. 184, doi. 10.1080/09699082.2018.1556420By:Prendergast, AmyPublication type:Article