1.
Baym N, Levine RS, editors. The Norton anthology of American literature. Shorter eighth edition. New York: W.W. Norton & Company; 2013.
2.
Hawthorne N, Harding B. The scarlet letter. New ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2008.
3.
Howells, William Dean. The rise of Silas Lapham. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 2002.
4.
Baldwin J. Another country. [New edition]. London: Penguin; 2001.
5.
Butler OE. Kindred. London: Headline; 2014.
6.
Baym, Nina, Levine, Robert S. The Norton anthology of American literature. 8th ed. New York: W. W. Norton & Company; 2012.
7.
Baym, Nina, Levine, Robert S. The Norton anthology of American literature: Vol. E, American literature since 1945. Eighth edition. New York: W. W. Norton & Company; 2012.
8.
Baym, Nina, Levine, Robert S. The Norton anthology of American literature: Vol. D, American literature 1914-1945. Eighth edition. New York: W. W. Norton & Company; 2012.
9.
Baym, Nina, Levine, Robert S. The Norton anthology of American literature: Vol. E, American literature since 1945. Eighth edition. New York: W. W. Norton & Company; 2012.
10.
Lauter, Paul, Yarborough, Richard, Bryer, Jackson R. The Heath anthology of American literature. 5th ed. Boston, Mass: Houghton Mifflin;
11.
Bercovitch, Sacvan, Patell, Cyrus R. K. The Cambridge history of American literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
12.
Bercovitch, Sacvan, Patell, Cyrus R. K. The Cambridge history of American literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
13.
Gray, Richard J. A history of American literature. Malden, Mass: Blackwell Pub; 2004.
14.
Ruland, Richard, Bradbury, Malcolm. From Puritanism to postmodernism: a history of American literature. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1992.
15.
Tallack, Douglas. Twentieth-century America: the intellectual and cultural context. London: Longman; 1991.
16.
Elliott, Emory. Columbia literary history of the United States. New York: Columbia U.P.; 1988.
17.
Grice, Helena. Beginning ethnic American literatures. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 2001.
18.
Lee, A. Robert. Multicultural American literature: comparative Black, Native, Latino/a and Asian American fictions. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press; 2003.
19.
PAL: Table of Contents.
20.
MAPS.
21.
Abrams, M. H., Harpham, Geoffrey Galt. A glossary of literary terms. 8th ed., International student ed. Boston, Mass: Thomson, Wadsworth; 2005.
22.
Baldick, Chris. The concise Oxford dictionary of literary terms [Internet]. 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2004. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t56
23.
Eaglestone, Robert, Dawsonera. Doing English: a guide for literature students [Internet]. 3rd ed. London: Routledge; 2009. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780203091852
24.
Eagleton, Terry. How to read a poem. Malden, Mass: Blackwell Pub; 2007.
25.
Gray, Martin. A dictionary of literary terms. 2nd rev. ed. Beirut: Longman York Press; 1992.
26.
Lennard, John. The poetry handbook: a guide to reading poetry for pleasure and practical criticism. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press; 2005.
27.
Montgomery, Martin. Ways of reading: advanced reading skills for students of English literature. 3rd ed. London: Routledge; 2007.
28.
Stott, Rebecca, Snaith, Anna, Rylance, Rick. Making your case: a practical guide to essay writing. Harlow: Longman; 2001.
29.
Williams, Rhian. The poetry toolkit: the essential guide to studying poetry. London: Continuum; 2009.
30.
Bercovitch, S. The American jeremiad. [Place of publication not identified]: Wisconsin U.P.; 1978.
31.
Bercovitch, Sacvan. The Puritan origins of the American self. New Haven ; London: Yale University Press; 1975.
32.
Delbanco, Andrew. The Puritan ordeal. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1991.
33.
Hambrick-Stowe, C E. The practice of piety: Puritan devotional disciplines in seventeenth century New England. [Place of publication not identified]: North Carolina UP for the Institute of Early American History and Culture; 1982.
34.
Holifield, E. Brooks. Theology in America: Christian thought from the age of the Puritans to the Civil War. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press; 2005.
35.
Miller, P. Errand into the wilderness. [Place of publication not identified]: Harper & Row;
36.
Miller, Perry. The New England mind: the seventeenth century. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1939.
37.
Morgan, E S. The Puritan dilemma: the story of John Winthrop. [Place of publication not identified]: Little, Brown;
38.
Porterfield, Amanda. Female piety in Puritan New England [Internet]. [Place of publication not identified]: Oxford University Press; 1992. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780195361773
39.
Amy Schrager Lang. Prophetic Woman: Anne Hutchinson and the Problem of Dissent in the ... [Internet]. Available from: http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_yPkqxbbR70C&printsec=frontcover&dq=Prophetic Woman: Anne Hutchinson and the Problem of Dissent in the Literature of New England&source=bl&ots=G3MaCkiSh0&sig=lydjgpMMFu7cVQcoproS_41MMC8&hl=en&sa=X&ei=hHoSULedI4qw0QWG6YHgCQ&ved=0CDMQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Prophetic%20Woman%3A%20Anne%20Hutchinson%20and%20the%20Problem%20of%20Dissent%20in%20the%20Literature%20of%20New%20England&f=false
40.
Winship, Michael P. Making heretics: militant Protestantism and free grace in Massachusetts, 1636-1641 [Internet]. Princeton: Princeton University Press; 2002. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781400824953
41.
Barnes, Elizabeth. States of sympathy: seduction and democracy in the American novel. New York: Columbia University Press; 1997.
42.
Bercovitch, Sacvan. The office of the Scarlet letter. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 1991.
43.
Baym, N. The shape of Hawthorne’s career. [Place of publication not identified]: Cornell U.P.; 1976.
44.
Bell, M D. Hawthorne and the historical romance of New England. [Place of publication not identified]: Princeton U.P.; 1971.
45.
Berlant, Lauren Gail. The anatomy of national fantasy: Hawthorne, Utopia, and everyday life. Chicago ; London: University of Chicago Press; 1991.
46.
Cameron, Sharon. The corporeal self: allegories of the body in Melville and Hawthorne. Columbia University Press Morningside edition. New York: Columbia University Press;
47.
Colacurcio, M J. New essays on The scarlet letter; ed by M J Colacurcio. [Place of publication not identified]: Cambridge U.P.; 1985.
48.
Crews, F C. The sins of the fathers: Hawthorne’s psychological themes. [Place of publication not identified]: O.U.P.; 1966.
49.
Crowley, J. Donald. Hawthorne: the critical heritage. London: Routledge & K. Paul;
50.
Gerber, John C., Ed. Twentieth Century Interpretations of the Scarlet Letter: a Collection of Critical Essays. [Place of publication not identified]: Prentice-Hall;
51.
Hoffman, Daniel. Form and fable in American fiction. Charlottesville ; London: University Press of Virginia; 1994.
52.
James, Henry. Hawthorne. Nottingham: Trent Editions; 1999.
53.
Seymour Katz. ‘Character,’ ‘Nature,’ and Allegory in The Scarlet Letter. Nineteenth-Century Fiction. University of California Press; Vol. 23(No. 1).
54.
Erika M. Kreger. ‘Depravity Dressed up in a Fascinating Garb’: Sentimental Motifs and the Seduced Hero(ine) in The Scarlet Letter. Nineteenth-Century Literature. University of California Press; Vol. 54(No. 3).
55.
Levine, Robert S. Conspiracy and romance: studies in Brockden Brown, Cooper, Hawthorne, and Melville. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2009.
56.
Leo B. Levy. The Landscape Modes of The Scarlet Letter. Nineteenth-Century Fiction. University of California Press; Vol. 23(No. 4).
57.
Jessie Ryon Lucke. Hawthorne’s Madonna Image in The Scarlet Letter. The New England Quarterly. The New England Quarterly, Inc.; Vol. 38(No. 3).
58.
Martin, Terence. Nathaniel Hawthorne. Rev. ed. Boston: Twayne Publishers; 1983.
59.
Matthiessen, F. O., American Council of Learned Societies. American renaissance: art and expression in the age of Emerson and Whitman [Internet]. London: Oxford University Press; 1941. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://name.umdl.umich.edu/HEB00004
60.
William H. Nolte. Hawthorne’s Dimmesdale: A Small Man Gone Wrong. The New England Quarterly. The New England Quarterly, Inc.; Vol. 38(No. 2).
61.
Pease, Donald E. Visionary compacts: American renaissance writings in cultural context. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press; 1987.
62.
Leland S. Person, Jr. Hester’s Revenge: The Power of Silence in The Scarlet Letter. Nineteenth-Century Literature. University of California Press; Vol. 43(No. 4).
63.
Millington, Richard H. The Cambridge companion to Nathaniel Hawthorne [Internet]. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press; 2004. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol052180745x_CCOL052180745X
64.
Swann, Charles. Nathaniel Hawthorne, tradition and revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1991.
65.
Giles, Paul. American Catholic arts and fictions: culture, ideology, aesthetics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2008.
66.
Hobsbaum, Philip. A reader’s guide to Robert Lowell. London: Thames and Hudson; 1988.
67.
Gould, S. Robert Lowell: essays on the poetry; ed by S G Axelrod and H Deese. [Place of publication not identified]: Cambridge U.P.; 1986.
68.
Perloff, Marjorie. The poetic art of Robert Lowell. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 1973.
69.
Coleman, Philip, McGowan, Philip. ‘After thirty falls’: new essays on John Berryman [Internet]. Amsterdam: Rodopi; 2007. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781435612938
70.
Phillips, Robert S. The confessional poets. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press;
71.
Epstein, Andrew. Beautiful enemies: friendship and postwar American poetry. New York: Oxford University Press; 2006.
72.
Woodard, Komozi. A nation within a nation: Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and Black power politics. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press; 1999.
73.
Royal, Derek Parker. Philip Roth: new perspectives on an American author. London: Praeger Publishers; 2005.
74.
Brauner, David. Post-war Jewish fiction: ambivalence, self-explanation and transatlantic connections [Internet]. Basingstoke: Palgrave; 2001. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780230501492
75.
Guttmann, A. The Jewish writer in America: assimilation and the crisis of identity. [Place of publication not identified]: O.U.P.; 1971.
76.
Parrish, Timothy. The Cambridge companion to Philip Roth [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2007. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521864305_CCOL0521864305
77.
Malin, Irving. Contemporary American-Jewish literature: critical essays. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; 1973.
78.
Wirth-Nesher, Hana, Kramer, Michael P. The Cambridge Companion to Jewish American literature [Internet]. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press; 2003. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521792932_CCOL0521792932
79.
Wade, Stephen. Jewish American literature since 1945: an introduction. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press; 1999.
80.
Bewley, M. The eccentric design: form in the classic American novel. [Place of publication not identified]: Columbia U.P.; 1970.
81.
Franklin B, Chaplin JE. Benjamin Franklin’s autobiography: an authorative text, contexts, criticism. New edition. New York: W.W. Norton; 2012.
82.
Bromell, Nicholas Knowles. By the sweat of the brow: literature and labor in antebellum America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 1993.
83.
Degler, Carl N. Out of our past: the forces that shaped modern America. Rev. ed. New York: Harper & Row;
84.
Lee, Brian. American fiction 1865-1940. London: Longman; 1987.
85.
Spindler, M. American literature and social change: William Dean Howells to Arthur Miller. [Place of publication not identified]: Macmillan; 1983.
86.
Weber, Max. The Protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism. 2nd ed. London: Allen & Unwin; 1976.
87.
Williams, William Appleman. The contours of American history. Chicago: Quadrangle Books;
88.
Crowley, John William. The Mask of fiction: essays on W.D. Howells. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press; 1989.
89.
Howells, William Dean, Cook, Don Lewis. The rise of Silas Lapham: an authoritative text, composition and backgrounds, contemporary responses, criticism. London: Norton; 1982.
90.
Pizer, Donald. The Cambridge companion to American realism and naturalism: Howells to London [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521433002_CCOL0521433002
91.
Hedges, W L. Washington Irving: An American study, 1802-1832. [Place of publication not identified]: Johns Hopkins Press; 1965.
92.
Neufeldt, Leonard. The economist: Henry Thoreau and enterprise [Internet]. New York: Oxford University Press; 1989. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780195363333
93.
Myerson, Joel. The Cambridge companion to Henry David Thoreau [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1995. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521440378_CCOL0521440378
94.
Robinson, David. Natural life: Thoreau’s worldly transcendentalism. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 2004.
95.
Bellis, Peter J. Writing revolution: aesthetics and politics in Hawthorne, Whitman, and Thoreau. Athens, Ga: University of Georgia Press; 2003.
96.
Hansen, Olaf. Aesthetic individualism and practical intellect: American allegory in Emerson, Thoreau, Adams, and James. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press; 1990.
97.
Claridge, Henry. F. Scott Fitzgerald: critical assessments. Mountfield: Helm Information; 1991.
98.
Prigozy, Ruth. The Cambridge companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2002. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521624479_CCOL0521624479
99.
Marx, Leo. The machine in the garden: technology and the pastoral ideal in America. New York: Oxford University Press; 1964.
100.
Miller, Perry. The New England mind: from colony to province. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 1953.
101.
Moran, Michael G. Inventing Virginia: Sir Walter Raleigh and the rhetoric of colonization, 1584-1590. New York: Peter Lang; 2007.
102.
Slotkin, Richard. Regeneration through violence: the mythology of the American frontier, 1600-1860. Middletown, Conn: Wesleyan University Press;
103.
Toulouse, Teresa. The captive’s position: female narrative, male identity, and royal authority in colonial New England. Bristol: University Presses Marketing [distributor]; 2007.
104.
Ward, Geoff. The writing of America: literature and cultural identity from the Puritans to the present. Cambridge: Polity Press; 2002.
105.
Beck, John. Writing the radical center: William Carlos Williams, John Dewey, and American cultural politics. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press; 2001.
106.
Breslin, James E. B. William Carlos Williams, an American artist. New York: Oxford University Press; 1970.
107.
Buell, Lawrence. Emerson. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press; 2003.
108.
Buell, Lawrence. The environmental imagination: Thoreau, nature writing, and the formation of American culture. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press; 1995.
109.
Cavell, S. The senses of Walden. [Place of publication not identified]: Viking Press;
110.
Fredman, Stephen. The grounding of American poetry: Charles Olson and the Emersonian tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1993.
111.
Greenspan, Ezra. Walt Whitman and the American reader. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1990.
112.
Halter, Peter. The revolution in the visual arts and the poetry of William Carlos Williams. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1994.
113.
Herd, David. Enthusiast!: essays on modern American literature. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 2007.
114.
Mariani, P L. William Carlos Williams: the poet and his critics. [Place of publication not identified]: American Library Association; 1975.
115.
Reynolds, David S. Walt Whitman’s America: a cultural biography. New York: Knopf; 1995.
116.
Costello, Bonnie. Elizabeth Bishop: questions of mastery. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press; 1991.
117.
Epstein, Andrew. Beautiful enemies: friendship and postwar American poetry. New York: Oxford University Press; 2006.
118.
Fredman, Stephen. The grounding of American poetry: Charles Olson and the Emersonian tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1993.
119.
Herd, David. Enthusiast!: essays on modern American literature. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 2007.
120.
O’Hara, Professor Frank, Pollock, Jackson. Jackson Pollock. New York: Literary Licensing, LLC; 2011.
121.
Perloff, Marjorie. The dance of the intellect: studies in the poetry of the Pound tradition. Evanston, Ill: Northwestern University Press; 1996.
122.
Shaw, Lytle. Fieldworks: from place to site in postwar poetics. Tuscaloosa, Ala: University Alabama Press; 2013.
123.
‘Of Cannibals’ by Michel de Montaigne.
124.
Benjamin Franklin: Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America.
125.
Forbes, Jack D. Black Africans and Native Americans: color, race, and caste in the evolution of red-black peoples. New York, NY, USA: Blackwell; 1988.
126.
Bataille, Gretchen M. Native American representations: first encounters, distorted images, and literary appropriations. Lincoln, Neb: University of Nebraska Press; 2001.
127.
Thomas, Helen Sarah. Romanticism and the slave narratives: transatlantic testimonies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2000.
128.
Fisch, Audrey A. The Cambridge companion to the African American slave narrative [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2007. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521850193_CCOL0521850193
129.
Gates, Henry Louis. Figures in black: words, signs and the ‘racial’ self. New York: O.U.P.; 1987.
130.
Levine, Robert S. Dislocating race & nation: episodes in nineteenth-century American literary nationalism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 2008.
131.
‘The Octoroon’ at The National [Internet]. Available from: https://sites.google.com/site/theoctoroonatthenational/
132.
Lorde, Audre. Sister outsider: essays and speeches. Trumansburg, N.Y.: Crossing Press; 1984.
133.
Anzaldúa, Gloria. Borderlands: the new mestiza = La frontera. San Francisco: Aunt Lute; 1987.
134.
Porter, Joy, Roemer, Kenneth M. The Cambridge companion to Native American literature [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2005. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521822831_CCOL0521822831
135.
Grice, Helena. Beginning ethnic American literatures. Manchester: Manchester University Press; 2001.
136.
Bayor, Ronald H. Race and ethnicity in America: a concise history. Chichester: Columbia University Press; 2003.
137.
Sollors, Werner. Beyond ethnicity: consent and descent in American culture. New York: Oxford University Press; 1986.
138.
Dickenson, Donna. Margaret Fuller: writing a woman’s life. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1993.
139.
Annette Kolodny. Inventing a Feminist Discourse: Rhetoric and Resistance in Margaret Fuller’s Woman in the Nineteenth Century. New Literary History. The Johns Hopkins University Press; Vol. 25(No. 2).
140.
Bauer, Dale M., Gould, Philip. The Cambridge companion to nineteenth-century American women’s writing [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2001. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521660033_CCOL0521660033
141.
Barbara Welter. The Cult of True Womanhood: 1820-1860. American Quarterly. The Johns Hopkins University Press; Vol. 18(No. 2).
142.
Inness, Sherrie A., Royer, Diana. Breaking boundaries: new perspectives on women’s regional writing. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press; 1997.
143.
Fetterley, Judith, Pryse, Marjorie. American women regionalists, 1850-1910. London: W.W. Norton; 1992.
144.
Shapiro, Ann R. Unlikely heroines: nineteenth-century American women writers and the woman question. London: Greenwood Press; 1987.
145.
Kilcup, Karen L. Nineteenth-century American women writers: a critical reader. Malden, Mass. ; Oxford: Blackwell; 1998.
146.
Ammons, Elizabeth. Conflicting stories: American women writers at the turn into the twentieth century. New York: Oxford University Press; 1992.
147.
Paul John Eakin. Sarah Orne Jewett and the Meaning of Country Life. American Literature. Duke University Press; Vol. 38(No. 4).
148.
Fetterley, Judith. The resisting reader: a feminist approach to American fiction. Bloomington: Indiana University Press; 1978.
149.
Pearce, T M. Mary Hunter Austin. [Place of publication not identified]: Twayne;
150.
Stacy Alaimo. The undomesticated nature of feminism: Mary Austin and the progressive women conservationists. Available from: http://go.galegroup.com.chain.kent.ac.uk/ps/retrieve.do?sgHitCountType=None&sort=RELEVANCE&inPS=true&prodId=LitRC&userGroupName=uokent&tabID=T001&searchId=R1&resultListType=RESULT_LIST&contentSegment=&searchType=AdvancedSearchForm&currentPosition=2&contentSet=GALE%7CA20962354&&docId=GALE|A20962354&docType=GALE&role=LitRC
151.
Stout, Janis P. Mary Austin’s feminism: A reassessment. Mary Austin’s feminism: A reassessment [Internet]. 30(1). Available from: http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=3&sid=b2565423-f9f8-409b-a134-344504b5093a%40sessionmgr11&hid=19&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=a9h&AN=532075
152.
Painter, Nell Irvin. Sojourner Truth: a life, a symbol. London: W.W. Norton; 1996.
153.
Renza, Louis A. ‘A White heron’ and the question of minor literature. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press; 1984.
154.
Warhol-Down, Robyn, Price Herndl, Diane. Feminisms: an anthology of literary theory and criticism. Rev. ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan; 1997.
155.
Martin, Wendy. An American triptych: Anne Bradstreet, Emily Dickinson, Adrienne Rich. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press; 1984.
156.
Juhasz, Suzanne. Naked and fiery forms: modern American poetry by women, a new tradition. New York: Harper & Row; 1976.
157.
Montefiore, Jan. Feminism and poetry: language, experience, identity in women’s writing. [2nd ed]. London: Pandora; 1994.
158.
Yorke, Liz. Impertinent voices: subversive strategies in contemporary women’s poetry. London: Routledge; 1991.
159.
Mark, Alison, Rees-Jones, Deryn. Contemporary women’s poetry: reading, writing, practice. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Macmillan; 2000.
160.
Kellner, Bruce. A Gertrude Stein companion: content with the example. London: Greenwood; 1988.
161.
Walker, J L. The making of a modernist: Gertrude Stein from Three lives to Tender buttons. [Place of publication not identified]: U. of Massachusetts P.; 1984.
162.
DeKoven, Marianne. A different language: Gertrude Stein’s experimental writing. Madison, Wis: University of Wisconsin Press; 1983.
163.
Robinson, J S. H D: the life and work of an American poet. [Place of publication not identified]: Houghton Mifflin; 1982.
164.
Laity, Cassandra. H.D. and the Victorian fin de siècle: gender, modernism, decadence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1996.
165.
Gregory, Eileen. H.D. and Hellenism: classic lines. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 1997.
166.
Rich, Adrienne Cecile, Gelpi, Barbara Charlesworth, Gelpi, Albert. Adrienne Rich’s poetry and prose: poems, prose, reviews, and criticism. London: W.W. Norton; 1993.
167.
Gill, Jo. The Cambridge companion to Sylvia Plath [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2006. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521844967_CCOL0521844967
168.
Peabody, Richard. A different beat: writings by women of the beat generation. London: Serpent’s Tail; 1997.
169.
Smith, Barbara. Home girls: a Black feminist anthology. New York: Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press; 1983.
170.
Sherman, Joan R. Collected black women’s poetry. New York: O.U.P.; 1988.
171.
Mance, Ajuan Maria. Inventing Black Women: African American Women Poets and Self-Representation, 1877-2000. Chicago: University of Tennessee Press; 2008.
172.
Righelato, Pat. Understanding Rita Dove. Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press; 2006.
173.
Parker, Pat. An expanded edition of Movement in Black / $c Pat Parker. Expanded ed. Ithaca, N.Y.: Firebrand Books; 1999.
174.
Ferguson, Moira. Jamaica Kincaid: where the land meets the body. Charlottesville, Va: U.P.of Virginia; 1994.
175.
Kincaid J. At the Bottom of the River. Penguin;
176.
Lim, Shirley Geok - lin, Ling, Amy. Reading the literatures of Asian America. Philadelphia: Temple U.P.; 1992.
177.
Võ, Linda Trinh, Sciachitano, Marian. Asian American women: the Frontiers reader. Lincoln, Neb: University of Nebraska Press; 2004.
178.
Chin, Marilyn. The phoenix gone, the terrace empty: poems. 1st ed. Minneapolis: Milkweed Editions; 2009.
179.
Cucinella, Catherine. Poetics of the body: Edna St. Vincent Millay, Elizabeth Bishop, Marilyn Chin, and Marilyn Hacker [Internet]. 1st ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan; 2010. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780230106512
180.
Porter, Joy, Roemer, Kenneth M. The Cambridge companion to Native American literature [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2005. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://cco.cambridge.org/login2%3Fdest%3D%252Fbook%253Fid%253Dccol0521822831_CCOL0521822831
181.
Harjo, Joy. A map to the next world: poetry and tales. 1st ed. London: W.W. Norton & Co; 2000.
182.
Sánchez, Marta Ester. Contemporary Chicana poetry: a critical approach to an emerging literature. Berkeley, Calif: University of California Press; 1985.
183.
Madsen, Deborah L. Understanding contemporary Chicana literature. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press; 2000.
184.
Cisneros, Sandra. Loose Woman: Poems. 1st Vintage Contemporaries Ed. New York: Random House USA Inc; 1995.
185.
Alvarez, Julia. The Woman I Kept to Myself. [Place of publication not identified]: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill; 2011.
186.
Crain, Caleb. American sympathy: men, friendship, and literature in the new nation. London: Yale University Press; 2001.
187.
Blount, Marcellus, Cunningham, George Philbert. Representing Black men. New York: Routledge; 1996.
188.
Wallace, Maurice O. Constructing the Black masculine: identity and ideality in African American men’s literature and culture, 1775-1995. Durham ; London: Duke University Press; 2002.
189.
Johnson, Michael K. Black masculinity and the frontier myth in American literature. Norman, Okla: University of Oklahoma Press; 2002.
190.
Gardiner, Judith Kegan. Masculinity studies & feminist theory: new directions. New York: Columbia University Press; 2002.
191.
Kimmel, Michael S., Hearn, Jeff, Connell, Raewyn. Handbook of studies on men & masculinities. London: Sage Publications; 2005.
192.
Baldwin, James. Notes of a native son. London: Pluto Press; 1985.
193.
Baldwin, James. The price of the ticket: collected nonfiction, 1948-1985. 1st ed. New York: St. Martin’s/Marek; 1985.
194.
Baldwin, James. The fire next time. London: Penguin; 1964.
195.
Clark, Keith. Black manhood in James Baldwin, Ernest J. Gaines, and August Wilson. Urbana, [Ill.]: University of Illinois Press; 2004.
196.
Kinnamon, Keneth. James Baldwin: a collection of critical essays. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall; 1974.
197.
O’Daniel, Therman Benjamin, College Language Association. James Baldwin: a critical evaluation. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press; 1981.
198.
Standley, Fred L., Burt, Nancy V. Critical essays on James Baldwin. Boston, Mass: G.K. Hall; 1988.
199.
Baldwin, James. Collected essays. New York: Library of America; 1998.
200.
McBride, Dwight A. James Baldwin now. London: New York University Press; 1999.
201.
African American Review.
202.
Gray, Richard J., Robinson, Owen. A companion to the literature and culture of the American south. Malden, MA: Blackwell; 2004.
203.
Gray, Richard J. Writing the South: ideas of an American region : with a new afterword. Louisiana pbk. ed. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1997.
204.
Malvasi, Mark G. The unregenerate South: the agrarian thought of John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, and Donald Davidson. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 1997.
205.
Wyatt-Brown, Bertram. Hearts of darkness: wellsprings of a southern literary tradition. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press; 2003.
206.
Coles, Robert. Flannery O’Connor’s South. Athens ; London: University of Georgia Press; 1993.
207.
Whitt, Margaret Earley. Understanding Flannery O’Connor. Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press; 1995.
208.
Kern, Stephen. The culture of time and space, 1880-1918. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard U.P.; 1983.
209.
Armstrong, Tim. Modernism: a cultural history. Cambridge: Polity; 2005.
210.
Giles, Paul. Hart Crane: the contexts of The bridge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2009.
211.
Whitworth, Michael H. Reading modernist poetry [Internet]. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell; 2010. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9781444320763
212.
Beach, Christopher. The Cambridge introduction to twentieth-century American poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2003.
213.
Butler OE, Francis C. Conversations with Octavia Butler. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi; 2010.
214.
Hampton GJ. Changing bodies in the fiction of Octavia Butler: slaves, aliens, and vampires [Internet]. Lanham, Md: Lexington Books; 2010. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://www.kentuk.eblib.com/patron/FullRecord.aspx?p=662241
215.
Spaulding AT. Re-forming the past: history, the fantastic, and the postmodern slave narrative [Internet]. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University Press; 2005. Available from: http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip057/2005003203.html
216.
James E, Mendlesohn F. The Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature [Internet]. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; 2012. Available from: http://library.kent.ac.uk/cgi-bin/resources.cgi?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/CCOL9780521429597
217.
Rody C. The daughter’s return: African-American and Caribbean women’s fictions of history [Internet]. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2001. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780195350036
218.
Rushdy AHA. Neo-Slave narratives: studies in the social logic of a literary form [Internet]. New York: Oxford University Press; 1999. Available from: http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=KentUniv&isbn=9780198029007
219.
Mitchell A. The freedom to remember: narrative, slavery, and gender in contemporary black women’s fiction. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press; 2002.
220.
Keizer AR. Black subjects: identity formation in the contemporary narrative of slavery. Ithaca: Cornell University Press; 2004.
221.
Baym N, Levine RS, editors. The Norton anthology of American literature. Shorter eighth edition. New York: W.W. Norton & Company; 2013.
222.
Howells WD. The rise of Silas Lapham. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1983.
223.
Hawthorne N, Harding B. The scarlet letter. New ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press; 2008.
224.
Howells WD. The rise of Silas Lapham. Harmondsworth: Penguin; 1983.