Nathaniel Hawthorne's Preoccupation with Unpardonable Sin: The Dramatization of Ethical Action in His Short Stories.Published in:2014By:Courtmanche, JasonPublication type:Book Review
Reading the Stranger: Immigration, Ethnicity and Class in American Writing, 1830-1860.Published in:2014By:Gemme, PaolaPublication type:Book Review
"I saw a concourse of strange figures": The Masque, Voyeurism, and Coverdale's Self-Consciousness in The Blithedale Romance.Published in:2014By:Martin, Michael S.Publication type:Literary Criticism
War and Union in Little America: The Space of Hawthorne's Rome.Published in:2014By:Parker, JoshuaPublication type:Literary Criticism
"I seem to myself like a spy or traitor": Transatlantic Dislocation in Hawthorne's English Travel Writing.Published in:2014By:Hewitson, JamesPublication type:Literary Criticism
"Then, all was spoken!" What "The Custom-House" and The Scarlet Letter Disclose.Published in:2014By:Valenti, Patricia DunlavyPublication type:Literary Criticism
Divine Omnipotence and Suffering Humanity: Hawthorne's Answer to Ahab.Published in:2014By:Reynolds, Larry J.Publication type:Proceeding
From the Editor's Gable.Published in:Nathaniel Hawthorne Review, 2014, v. 40, n. 2, p. iii, doi. 10.5325/nathhawtrevi.40.1.iiiPublication type:Article