Friday, September 24, 2010

Preliminary Bibliography

The assignment from Dr. Logan:  


Using the MLA International Bibliography and America: History and Life databases at the UCF Library, develop a preliminary bibliography of secondary scholarly sources in the discipline of literature (with contextual sources from historians).  Use MLA documentation style.  Include keywords and searches used to develop this bibliography.  Consult a reference librarian if you encounter difficulties. 
[Submitted: 24 September 2010]

I have included a lot of sources which will (probably) end up being discarded during a closer look at each journal article and/or book.  However, I wanted to include them all because, one, I spent a lot of time looking them up, and two, it provides with me a wide range of possibilities for my project.  This preliminary bibliography will serve as a valuable resource for my project, and while I know I’ll end up spending more time on research, this guide should help me narrow and focus my search.

There were no results for female homosocial, and none applicable to my topic for homosocial in MLA, which is unsurprising considering its absence in the Library of Congress Subject Headings book.

Using MMMB in MLA for various options yielded just the modern edition.  Using MMMB as keyword term in America: History & Life yielded two already recorded book reviews of the modern edition, and one article about her published Miscellanies, Moral and Instructive text.

I included book reviews because I want to know how the book/article was received by the scholarly audience, or to quote Dr. Anna Jones, to see if they “bought it.”  I also included dissertations because of their works cited, which could potentially yield a lot of valuable sources.  I especially want to track down Susan Stabile’s dissertation, not just the abstract, which will require an ILL because the full text is not available via ProQuest.  When I included sources listed in the books I have already checked out of the UCF library, I only looked in the introductions due to time constraints.  Sometimes a source would appear in multiple locations (a book’s introduction, MLA and America: History & Life); I merely recorded it the first time I encountered it rather than list unnecessary duplications.




The categories of my preliminary bibliography at a quick glance:
  • Recommendations from: Dr. Logan, and Jessica Workman.
  • Found on my own
  • From my previous research on The Factory Girl


    • From Civil Tongues & Polite Letters in British America, A Colonial Woman’s Bookshelf, Literature After Feminism, The Madwoman in the Attic, Memory’s Daughters, and Reading Women.


      • Using of Marty Beth Norton as author in MLA
      • Using Adrienne Rich as the subject term in MLA
      • Using Carroll Smith-Rosenberg in America: History & Life
      • Using Carroll Smith-Rosenberg in MLA
      • Using Susan Stabile as author in MLA
      • Using Laurel Thatcher Ulrich as the author in WorldCat


        • Using commonplace book in America: History & Life
        • Using commonplace book as subject (1700-1799) in MLA
        • Using Delaware River Valley (N.Y.-Del. & N.J.) (1700-1799) in America: History & Life
        • Using female friendship in literature (1700-1799) in MLA
        • Using female-female relations (1700-1799) in MLA
        • Using lesbianism in literature (1700-1799) in MLA
        • Using literature and revolutions, (subject literature: American) (1700-1799): in MLA
        • Using Manuscripts, American in America: History & Life
        • Using Manuscripts, American (1700-1799) as subject in MLA
        • Using Manuscript studies, American (1700-1799) as subject in MLA
        • Using Quaker women (1700-1799) in America: History & Life
        • Using Quaker women (1700-1799) in MLA
        Recommendations from Dr. Logan:
        "Commonplace Book." Notes about Notes.  Eastgate Systems, Inc.  Web. 21 Sept. 2010. 
        <http://notesaboutnotes.com/Notes/CommonplaceBook.html>.

        "Commonplace Books: Collections Then and Now."  Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library.  Yale University. Web. 21 Sept. 2010. <http://www.library.yale.edu/beinecke/compb.htm>.

        Felski, Rita.  Literature after Feminism.  Chicago: The U of Chicago P, 2003.  Print.  

        "Introduction". American Women Prose Writers to 1820.  Ed. Carla Mulford, Angela Vietto, and Amy E. Winans.  Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 200. Detroit: Gale Research, 1999. xvii-xxx.  Dictionary of Literary Biography Complete Online.  Gale.  6 September 2010.  Web. 

        Shields, David S.  Civil Tongues & Polite Letters in British America.  Chapel Hill: U of North Caroline P, 1997.  Print.

        Stabile, Susan M. Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America. NY: Cornell UP, 2004. Print.


        Recommendations from Jessica Workman:
        Saar, Doreen Alvarez., and Mary Anne. Schofield, comps.  Eighteenth-century Anglo-American Women Novelists: a Critical Reference Guide. NY: G.K. Hall, 1996. Print. 
        [UCF call number: PR858.W6.E37 1996]

        Todd, Janet, ed.  A Dictionary of British and American Women Writers, 1660-1800. Totowa: Rowman & Allenheld, 1985. Print.
        [UCF call number: PR113.D5 1985]


        From my previous research on The Factory Girl:
        Davis, Cynthia J. and Kathryn West.  Women Writers in the United States: a Timeline of Literary, Cultural and Social History. NY: Oxford UP, 1996.

        Ryan, Mary.  Womanhood in America: from colonial times to the present. NY: F. Watts, 1975.

        Vietto, Angela.  Women and Authorship in Revolutionary America. Aldershot, Hants: Ashgate, 2005.

        Wagner-Martin, Linda, and Cathy N. Davidson.  The Oxford Book of Women's Writing in the United States. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1995.


        Found on my own:
        Baym, Nina, Wayne Franklin, Philip F. Gura, and Arnold Krupat, eds.  The Norton Anthology of American Literature: Volume A. Seventh ed. NY: W. W. Norton & Co., 2007.  Print.
        [From my own bookshelf.]

        Blau, Mellinda.  "The Relationship Revolution: The Internet as a New Way of Life."  Psychotherapy Networker September/October (2010). Web. 24 Sept. 2010. <http://www.psychotherapynetworker.org/magazine/currentissue/1094-the-relationship-revolution>.

        Blecki, Catherine L., and Karin A. Wulf, eds.  Milcah Martha Moore's Book: a Commonplace Book from Revolutionary America.  University Park: Pennsylvania State UP, 1997.  Print.
        [The modern, critical edition of my text.]

        Brayman, Hackel H, and Catherine E. Kelly.  Reading Women: Literacy, Authorship, and Culture in the Atlantic World, 1500-1800.  Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 2008.  Print. 
        [Found while trying to search for Susan Stabile in the UCF Catalog.]

        Davidson, Cathy N.  Revolution and the Word: the Rise of the Novel in America.  Oxford (GB): Oxford UP, 2004.  Print.
        [Used in previous research project.]

        Hayes, Kevin J.  A Colonial Woman's Bookshelf.  Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 1996.  Print.
        [Found via shelf browsing, I think it was next to Reading Women on the shelf.]

        Logan, Lisa M.  “The Importance of Women to Early American Study: A Social Justice.”  Early American Literature 44.3 (2009): 641-48.  MLA International Bibliography.  Web.  10 Sept. 2010.
        [Found in MLA while looking up another article.]

        Mulford, Carla.  “Writing Women in Early American Studies: On Canons, Feminist Critique, and the Work of Writing Women into History”  Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature 26.1 (2007): 107-18.  Project MUSE.  Web.  22 Aug. 2010.
        [Assigned as first reading for our class.]

        Rich, Adrienne. "Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence."  Signs 5.4 (1980): 631-60.   JSTOR. Web. 01 Sept. 2010.
        [From class discussion.]

        Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll.  "The Female World of Love and Ritual: Relations between Women in Nineteenth-Century America."  Signs 1.1 (1975): 1-29.  JSTOR.  Web.  09 Sept. 2010.
        [From class discussion; wrong century but I’m hoping some of it is applicable to my project.]




        From Civil Tongues & Polite Letters in British America:
        Hall, David D.  Worlds of Wonder, Days of Judgment: Popular Religious Belief in Early New England.  NY: Knopf : Distributed by Random House, 1989.  Print.

        Hall, David D., and John B. Hench, eds.  Needs and Opportunities in the History of the Book: America, 1639 – 1876.  Worcester: American Antiquarian Society, 1987. Print.

        Spengemann, William C.  A New World of Words: Redefining Early American Literature.  New Haven: Yale UP, 1994.  Print.

        Stockton, Annis B., and Carla Mulford.  Only for the Eye of a Friend: The Poems of Annis Boudinot Stockton.  Charlottesville: UP of Virginia, 1995.  Print.

        Stabile, Susan.  “‘I Wou’d Wish Our Present Leaders Might Have a Three-fold Dose, at the Dawn and Close of Every Day’: Philadelphia Women Political Satirists as Moral Physicians.”  The Philadelphia Center for Early American Studies, Winterthur Museum, Delaware.  5 May 1995.  Reading.  

        Warner, Michael.  The Letters of the Republic: Publication and the Public Sphere in Eighteenth-Century America.  Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1990.  Print.


        From A Colonial Woman’s Bookshelf:
        Cowell, Pattie.  “Knowledge and Power: Cultural Scripts in Early America.”  American Literary History 4.2 (1992).  337-344.  JSTOR.  Web.  23 Sept. 2010.

        Harris, Susan M. (Hayes did not list specific works, but a glance through her texts on MLA prove them to be too late time wise for my topic)

        Norton, Mary Beth.  Liberty’s Daughters: the Revolutionary experience of American women, 1750-1800.  Boston: Little, Brown, 1980.  Print.  

        --.  “The Evolution of White Women’s Experience in Early America.”
        [I cannot locate proper citation information.]

        Stabile, Susan. (Hayes did not list specific works.)

        Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher. (Hayes did not list specific works.)

        Wolf II, Edwin.  The Book Culture of a Colonial American City.
        [I cannot locate proper citation information.]


        From Literature After Feminism:
        Erkkila, Betsy.  The Wicked Sisters: Women Poets, Literary History, and Discord.  Oxford: Oxford UP, 1992.  Print.    

        Fetterley, Judith.  The Resisting Reader: A Feminist Approach to American Fiction. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1978.  Print.

        Lara, Maria Pia.  Moral Textures: Feminist Narratives in the Public Sphere.  Berkeley: U of California P, 1988.  Print.

        Showalter, Elaine.  Sister’s Choice: Tradition and Change in American Women’s Writing.  Oxford: Clarendon, 1991.  Print.

        Stafford, Barbara Maria.  Visual Analogy: Consciousness as the Art of Connecting.  Cambridge: MIT Press, 1999.  Print.


        From The Madwoman in the Attic:
        Gilbert, Sandra M., Susan Gubar.  “Infection in the Sentence: The Women Writer and the Anxiety of Authorship.”  The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination.  Second ed.  New Haven: Yale UP, 2000.  45-92.  Print.

        Moers, Ellen. Literary Women.  N.Y: Doubleday, 1976. Print.

        Russ, Joanna.  “What Can a Heroine do?  Or Why Women Can’t Write.”  Images of Women in Fiction: Feminist Perspectives.  Ed. Susan K. Cornillon.  Bowling Green: Bowling Green U Popular P, 1973. 3-20.  Print.

        Spacks, Patricia A. M. The Female Imagination. NY: Knopf: distributed by Random House, 1975. Print.


        From Memory’s Daughters:
        Cowell, Pattie.  Women Poets in Pre-Revolutionary America, 1650-1775.  Troy: Whiston Pub. Co., 1981.  Print.

        Ezell, Margaret.  Social Authorship and the Advent of Print.  Baltimore: John Hopkins UP, 1999.  Print.

        Grosz, Elizabeth.  Volatile Bodies: Toward a Corporeal Feminism.  Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1994.  Print.

        Lockridge, Kenneth.  The Sources of Patriarchal Rage: The Commonplace Books of William Byrd and Thomas Jefferson and the Gendering of Power in the Eighteenth Century.  NY: NY UP, 1992.  Print.

        Miller, Susan.  Assuming the Positions: Cultural Pedagogy and the Politics of Commonplace Writing.  Pittsburgh: U of Pittsburgh P, 1998.  Print.

        Moss, Ann.  Printed Commonplace Books and the Structuring of Renaissance Thought.  NY: Oxford UP, 1996.  Print.

        Thornton, Tamara.  Handwriting in America: A Cultural History.  New Haven: Yale UP, 1996.  Print.

        Wulf, Karin Anne.  A Marginal Independence: Unmarried women in colonial Philadelphia.  Diss. The Johns Hopkins University, 1994.  Dissertations & Theses: Full Text, ProQuest. Web. 24 Sep. 2010.


        From Reading Women:
        Giles, Paul.  Transatlantic Insurrections: British Culture and the Formation of American Literature, 1730-1860.  Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 2001.  Print.

        Kilcup, Karen L., ed.  Soft Canons: American Women Writers and the Masculine Tradition.  Iowa City: U of Iowa P, 1999.  Print.

        Monaghan, E. Jennifer.  “Literacy Instruction and Gender in Colonial New England.”  Reading in America: Literature and Social History.  Ed. Cathy Davidson.  London: John Hopkins UP, 1989. 53-80.  Print.
        Using of Marty Beth Norton as author in MLA:
        Berkin, Carol Ruth, and Mary Beth Norton. Women of America: A History. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1979.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Norton, Mary Beth. "Getting to the Source: Hetty Shepard, Dorothy Dudley, and Other Fictional Colonial Women I Have Come to Know Altogether Too Well." Journal of Women's History 10.3 (1998): 141-154.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Norton, Mary Beth. "'My Resting Reaping Times': Sarah Osborn's Defense of Her 'Unfeminine' Activities, 1767." Signs 2.2 (1976): 515-529.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Norton, Mary Beth, and Emerson W. Baker. "'The Names of the Rivers': A New Look at an Old Document." New England Quarterly: A Historical Review of New England Life and Letters 80.3 (2007): 459-487.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Adrienne Rich as the subject term in MLA:
        Bulamur, Ayse Naz. "Cry Babies Challenging the Feminist Myths." Nebula 3.2-3 (2006): 25-45.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Cole, Cheryl L., and Shannon L. C. Cate. "Compulsory Gender and Transgender Existence: Adrienne Rich's Queer Possibility." WSQ: Women's Studies Quarterly 36.3-4 (2008): 279-287.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Eagleton, Mary. "Adrienne Rich, Location and the Body." Journal of Gender Studies 9.3 (2000): 299-312.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Farwell, Marilyn R. "Adrienne Rich and an Organic Feminist Criticism." College English 39.2 (1977): 191-203.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Farwell, Marilyn R. "Toward a Definition of the Lesbian Literary Imagination." Sexual Practice, Textual Theory: Lesbian Cultural Criticism. 66-84. Cambridge: Blackwell, 1993.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Flynn, Gale. "The Radicalization of Adrienne Rich." Hollins Critic 11.4 (1974): 1-15.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Fox, Catherine Olive-Marie. "Be-Coming Subjects: Reclaiming a Politics of Location as Radical Political Rhetoric." Dissertation Abstracts International, Section A: The Humanities and Social Sciences 65.6 (2004): 2187.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Friedman, Susan Stanford. "Reply to Rich." Signs 9.4 (1984): 738-740.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Hallstein, D. Lynn O'Brien. "Matrophobic Sisters and Daughters: The Rhetorical Consequences of Matrophobia in Contemporary White Feminist Analyses of Maternity." Women's Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 36.4 (2007): 269-296.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Haran, Joan. "Theorizing (Hetero)Sexuality and (Fe)Male Dominance." Extrapolation: A Journal of Science Fiction and Fantasy 45.1 (2004): 89-102.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Kahn, Coppelia. "Excavating 'Those Dim Minoan Regions': Maternal Subtexts in Patriarchal Literature." Diacritics: A Review of Contemporary Criticism 12.2 (1982): 32-41.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Kennard, Jean E. "Ourself behind Ourself: A Theory for Lesbian Readers." Gender and Reading: Essays on Readers, Texts, and Contexts. 63-80. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1986.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Kulick, Don. "Cool Heads and Hot Hearts." Sexualities: Studies in Culture and Society 11.1-2 (2008): 80-86.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Martin, Wendy. "Another View of the 'City upon a Hill': The Prophetic Vision of Adrienne Rich." Women Writers and the City: Essays in Feminist Literary Criticism. 249-264. Knoxville: U of Tennessee P, 1984.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        McCorkle, James. "Adrienne Rich: A Common Language of Self-Definition." NMAL: Notes on Modern American Literature 9.3 (1985): MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        McKnight, Jeannie. "American Dream, Nightmare Underside: Diaries, Letters, and Fiction of Women on the American Frontier." Women, Women Writers, and the West. 25-44. Troy: Whitston, 1979.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Miller, Nancy K. "Changing the Subject: Authorship, Writing, and the Reader." Feminist Studies: Critical Studies. 102-120. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1986.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Nestle, Joan. "Wars and Thinking." Journal of Women's History 15.3 (2003): 49-57.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Radhakrishnan, R. "Revisionism and the Subject of History." The Postcolonial and the Global. 69-81. Minneapolis, MN: U of Minnesota P, 2008.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Ratcliffe, Krista. "Coming Out: Or, How Adrienne Rich's Feminist Theory Complicates Intersections of Rhetoric and Composition Studies, Cultural Studies, and Writing Program Administration." Teaching Rhetorica: Theory, Pedagogy, Practice. 31-47. Portsmouth: Boynton/Cook, 2006.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Rupp, Leila J. "Women's History in the New Millennium: Adrienne Rich's 'Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence': A Retrospective." Journal of Women's History 15.3 (2003): 7-89.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Ryan-Flood, Roisin. "On Michel Foucault and Adrienne Rich: Thirty Years On." Sexualities: Studies in Culture and Society 11.1-2 (2008): 79-119.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Schneider, Beth. "Arguments, Citations, Traces: Rich and Foucault and the Problem of Heterosexuality." Sexualities: Studies in Culture and Society 11.1-2 (2008): 86-93.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Schweickart, Patrocinio P. "Reading Ourselves: Toward a Feminist Theory of Reading." Gender and Reading: Essays on Readers, Texts, and Contexts. 31-62. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1986.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Spencer, Luke. "'That Light of Outrage': The Historicism of Adrienne Rich." English: The Journal of the English Association 51.200 (2002): 145-160.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Carroll Smith-Rosenberg in America: History & Life:
        Nothing applicable to my project.


        Using Carroll Smith-Rosenberg as subject term in MLA:
        Swain, Tania Navarro, and Marie-France Depeche. "Unveiling Relations: Women and Women-On Caroll Smith-Rosenberg's Research." Journal of Women's History 12.3 (2000): 29-33.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 24 Sept. 2010.

        Rupp, Leila J. "Women's History in the New Millennium: Caroll Smith-Rosenberg's 'The Female World of Love and Ritual' after Twenty-Five Years." Journal of Women's History 12.3 (2000): 8-38.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 24 Sept. 2010.


        Using Susan Stabile as author in MLA:
        Ousterhout, Anne M., Joseleyne A. Slade, and Susan M. Stabile. The Most Learned Woman in America: A Life of Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson. University Park: Pennsylvania State UP, 2004.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Stabile, Susan Marie. "'By a Female Hand': Letters, Belles Lettres, and the Philadelphia Culture of Performance, 1760-1820."  Dissertation Abstracts International, Section A: The Humanities and Social Sciences 57.9 (1997): 3942.  MLA International BibliographyEBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Laurel Thatcher Ulrich as the author in WorldCat:
        Cott, Nancy F., Elizabeth H. Pleck.  A Heritage of Her Own: toward a new social history of American women.  NY: Simon and Schuster, 1979.  Print.

        Hoffer, Peter Charles.  Colonial Women and Domesticity: selected articles on gender in early America.  NY: Garland Pub., 1988.

        Kerber, Linda K., Jane Sherron De Hart.  Women’s America: refocusing the past.  NY: Oxford UP, 1995.  Print. 

        Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher.  Good Wives: images and reality in the lives of women in northern New England, 1650-1750.  NY: Knopf, 1982.  Print.

        Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher.  Well-behaved Women Seldom Make History.  NY: Knopf, 2007.  Print
        Using commonplace book in America: History & Life:
        Mekeel, Arthur J. "Milcah Martha Moore's Book: A Commonplace Book from Revolutionary America."  Quaker History 88.1 (1999): 71.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 24 Sept. 2010.
        [book review]

        Klepp, Susan E. "Milcah Martha Moore's Book: A Commonplace Book from Revolutionary America."  Pennsylvania History 65.4 (1998): 533-535.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 24 Sept. 2010.
        [book review]


        Using commonplace book as subject (1700-1799) in MLA:
        Darnton, Robert. "Extraordinary Commonplaces."  New York Review of Books 47.20 (2000): 82-87.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 24 Sept. 2010.

        Feldman, Paula R. "How Their Audiences Knew Them: Forgotten Media and the Circulation of Poetry by Women."  Approaches to Teaching British Women Poets of the Romantic Period. 32-39. NY: Modern Language Association of America, 1997.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 24 Sept. 2010.


        Using Delaware River Valley (N.Y.-Del. & N.J.) (1700-1799) in America: History & Life:
        [all are book reviews of Stabile’s Memory’s Daughters]

        Davis, Gayle R. "Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America."  Journal of American History 92.3 (2005): 960-961.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Humphrey, Thomas J. "Making Memories In Early America." Reviews in American History 33.1 (2005): 47-53.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Klepp, Susan E. "Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America."  Pennsylvania Magazine of History & Biography 130.1 (2006): 117-118.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Kurjiaka, Susan. "Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America."  American Literature 77.3 (2005): 637-639.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Purcell, Sarah. "Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America."  Journal of the Early Republic 27.1 (2007): 199-201.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Thornton, Tamara Plakins. "Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America."  American Historical Review 110.2 (2005): 471-472.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Sheumaker, Helen. "Memory's Daughters: The Material Culture of Remembrance in Eighteenth-Century America."  Journal of Interdisciplinary History 37.3 (2007): 465-466.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Vaux, Trina.  Guide to Women's History Resources in the Delaware Valley Area.  Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983.  Print.
        [A book review for this text was mentioned in America: History & Life, but not the text itself, which I had to look up.] 


        Using female friendship in literature (1700-1799) in MLA:
        Curran, Stuart. "Anna Seward and the Dynamics of Female Friendship."  Romantic Women Poets: Genre and Gender. 11-21. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2007.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Moore, Lisa L. "Queer Gardens: Mary Delany's Flowers and Friendships."  Eighteenth-Century Studies 39.1 (2005): 49-70.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Tassoni, John Paul. "'I Can Step Out of Myself a Little': Feminine Virtue and Female Friendship in Hannah Foster's The Coquette."  Communication and Women's Friendships: Parallels and Intersections in Literature and Life. 97-111. Bowling Green: Popular, 1993.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Yadlon, Susan M. "The Bluestocking Circle: The Negotiation of 'Reasonable' Women."  Communication and Women's Friendships: Parallels and Intersections in Literature and Life. 113-131. Bowling Green: Popular, 1993.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using female-female relations (1700-1799) in MLA:
        Berg, Temma F. "Charlotte Lennox and Lydia Clerke: Reflecting on Letters."  Eighteenth-Century Women: Studies in Their Lives, Work, and Culture 2.(2002): 61-93.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Colwill, Elizabeth. "Epistolary Passions: Friendship and the Literary Public of Constance de Salm, 1767-1845."  Journal of Women's History 12.3 (2000): 39-68.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Curran, Stuart. "Dynamics of Female Friendship in the Later Eighteenth Century."  Nineteenth-Century Contexts 23.2 (2001): 221-239.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Forbes, Joan. "Anti-Romantic Discourse as Resistance: Women's Fiction 1775-1820."  Romance Revisited. 293-305. NY: New York UP, 1995.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Wahl, Elizabeth Susan. Invisible Relations: Representations of Female Intimacy in the Age of Enlightenment. Stanford: Stanford UP, 1999.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Wenner, Wendy J. "'A Viper and Engine of the Devil': The Violent Woman and Female/Female Violence in Eighteenth-Century Fiction."  Dissertation Abstracts International 54.11 (1994): 4107A.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using lesbianism in literature (1700-1799) in MLA
        Incorvati, Rick. "The Poetry of Friendship: Connecting the Histories of Women and Lesbian Sexuality in the Undergraduate Classroom."  Teaching British Women Writers 1750-1900. 59-73. NY: Peter Lang, 2005.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Faderman, Lillian. "Who Hid Lesbian History?."  The New Lesbian Studies: Into the Twenty-First Century. 41-47. NY: Feminist Press at the City U of New York, 1996.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        O'Driscoll, Sally. "The Lesbian and the Passionless Woman: Femininity and Sexuality in Eighteenth-Century England."  Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation 44.2-3 (2003): 103-131.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        O'Driscoll, Sally. "'Lesbian' Literary History in the Eighteenth Century."  Women and Literary History: 'For There She Was'. 64-73. Newark: U of Delaware P, 2003.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        O'Driscoll, Sally. "Queerness, Class, and Sexuality."  Queer People: Negotiations and Expressions of Homosexuality, 1700-1800. 69-85. Lewisburg: Bucknell UP, 2007.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. "Privilege of Unknowing."  Genders 1.(1988): 102-124.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using literature and revolutions, (subject literature: American) (1700-1799): in MLA:
        Bloch, Ruth H. "The Gendered Meanings of Virtue in Revolutionary America."  Signs 13.1 (1987): 37-58.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Comfort, Mary Sauter. "The Literary Styles of Four Women Diarists of the American Revolution."  Dissertation Abstracts International 46.6 (1985): 1625A.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Emerson, Everett. "Literature and Change: A Look at the Poetry of the Early Years of the United States."  Modern Language Studies 6.1 (1976): 5-11.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Olson, Alison Gilbert. "Political Humor, Deference, and the American Revolution."  Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal 3.2 (2005): 363-382.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Philbrick, Thomas. "The American Revolution as a Literary Event."  Columbia Literary History of the United States. 139-155. NY: Columbia UP, 1987.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Sayre, Robert F. "Revolutionary Concepts of Self."  Interface: Essays on History, Myth and Art in American Literature. 3-12. Montpellier: Pubs. de la Recherche, U Paul Valery, 1985.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Tucker, Bruce. "The Reinvention of New England, 1691-1770."  New England Quarterly: A Historical Review of New England Life and Letters 59.3 (1986): 315-340.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Yerkes, Amy Marie. "Satire, Ideology, and Dissonance in American Revolutionary Culture."  Dissertation Abstracts International, Section A: The Humanities and Social Sciences 62.2 (2001): 578.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Manuscripts, American in America: History & Life:
        Smith, Murphy D. "Manuscript Collecting at the American Philosophical Society: the first 101 years."  Journal of the History of Collections 1.2 (1989): 197-206.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Manuscripts, American (1700-1799) as subject in MLA:
        Altick, Richard D. "A Neglected Source for Literary Biography."  PMLA: Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 64.3 (1949): 319-324.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Bannet, Eve Tavor. "Printed Epistolary Manuals and the Rescripting of Manuscript Culture."  Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 36.(2007): 13-34.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Mulford, Carla J. "Annis Boudinot Stockton and Benjamin Young Prime: A Poetical Correspondence, and More."  Princeton University Library Chronicle 52.2 (1991): 231-266.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Reese, William S. "Americana in the Paul Mellon Bequest."  Yale University Library Gazette 75.3-4 (2001): 145-166.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Manuscript studies, American (1700-1799) as subject in MLA:
        Allan, David. "A Reader Writes: Negotiating The Wealth of Nations in an Eighteenth-Century Commonplace Book."  Philological Quarterly 81.2 (2002): 207-233.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Quaker women (1700-1799) in America: History & Life:
        Marietta, Jack D. "Quakers and the American Family: British Settlement in the Delaware Valley."  William & Mary Quarterly 46.3 (1989): 613-615.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Soderlund, Jean R. "Women's Authority in Pennsylvania and New Jersey Quaker Meetings, 1680-1760."  William & Mary Quarterly 44.4 (1987): 722-749.  America: History & Life. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.


        Using Quaker women (1700-1799) in MLA:
        Bolz, Barbara Anne. "Silence and Voices: Individualism, Communities, and the Making of Agency in American Quaker Women's Autobiographies."  Dissertation Abstracts International, Section A: The Humanities and Social Sciences 58.8 (1998): 3129.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Klepp, Susan E., and Karin Wulf.  The Diary of Hannah Callender Sansom: Sense and Sensibility in the Age of the American Revolution. Ithaca: Cornell UP, 2010.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

        Tarter, Michele Lise. "Sites of Performance: Theorizing the History of Sexuality in the Lives and Writings of Quaker Women, 1650-1800." Dissertation Abstracts International 54.10 (1994): 3740A.  MLA International Bibliography. EBSCO. Web. 23 Sept. 2010.

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