"La Maladie anglaise" in French Eighteenth-Century Writing: From Stereotype to Individuation.Published in:Studies in the Literary Imagination, 2011, v. 44, n. 2, p. 109, doi. 10.1353/sli.2011.0008By:Hopes, JeffreyPublication type:Article
Fact, Truth, and the Limits of Sympathy: Newspaper Reporting of Suicide in the North of England, circa 1750-1830.Published in:Studies in the Literary Imagination, 2011, v. 44, n. 2, p. 93, doi. 10.1353/sli.2011.0015By:Houston, RabPublication type:Article
Cause or Symptom? Contentions Surrounding Religious Melancholy and Mental Medicine in Late-Georgian Britain.Published in:Studies in the Literary Imagination, 2011, v. 44, n. 2, p. 63, doi. 10.1353/sli.2011.0014By:Andrews, JonathanPublication type:Article
Melancholy Amusements: Women, Gardens, and the Depression of Spirits.Published in:2011By:Bending, StephenPublication type:Essay
"As Melancholy as a Sick Parrot": Depressed(?) Women at the Beginning of the Long Eighteenth Century.Published in:2011By:Hobby, ElainePublication type:Essay
Scurvy Vapors and the Devil's Claw: Religion and the Body in Seventeenth-Century Women's Melancholy.Published in:Studies in the Literary Imagination, 2011, v. 44, n. 2, p. 1, doi. 10.1353/sli.2011.0011By:Hodgkin, KatherinePublication type:Article