'Without Contraries There is No Progression': Cinematic Montage and the Relationship of Illustration to Text in William Blake's "The [First] Book of Urizen."Published in:2011By:Leonard, GarryPublication type:Essay
Rage, Embodiment, and Withdrawal: Trans Impossibilities in William Blake's The [First] Book of Urizen.Published in:Studies in Romanticism, 2024, v. 63, n. 4, p. 557, doi. 10.1353/srm.2024.a951774By:Yarberry, S.Publication type:Article
What Is Called Corporeal: William Blake and the Question of the Body.Published in:2010By:Goss, Erin M.Publication type:Essay
Of "Combustion, blast, vapour, and cloud": William Blake's Urizen as Steam Engine, Albion Mill, & Notes Towards a Materialist Method for the Anthropocene.Published in:Essays in Romanticism, 2022, v. 29, n. 2, p. 131, doi. 10.3828/eir.2022.29.2.3By:Leveton, Jacob HenryPublication type:Article
Unruly Children: Blake's Book of Urizen and Embryology's Break from Newtonian Law.Published in:2016By:Fletcher, JosephPublication type:Literary Criticism