Charlotte Smith Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- Beachy Head, with Other Poems
- Charlotte Smith's Letters and the Practice of Self-Presentation
- Removing the Anglo-Saxon Yoke: The Francocentric Vision of Charlotte Smith's Later Works
- Introduction to Beachy Head with Other Poems
- Contradictory Narratives: Feminine Ideals in Emmeline.
- Romantic Aspirations, Restricted Possibilities: The Novels of Charlotte Smith
- Thorns and Roses: The Sonnets of Charlotte Smith
- The French Revolution in Charlotte Smith's Works: Desmond, The Emigrants, and The Banished Man
- From Charlotte Smith to Nehemiah Higginbottom: Revising the Genealogy of the Early Romantic Sonnet
- Gendering the Civilizing Process: The Case of Charlotte Smith's Emmeline, the Orphan of the Castle
- In the Churchyard, Outside the Church: Personal Mysticism and Ecclesiastical Politics in Two Poems by Charlotte Smith
- ‘Dost thou not know my voice?’: Charlotte Smith and the Lyric's Audience
- Charlotte Smith's Elegiac Sonnets: Losses and Gains
- Charlotte Smith and ‘Mr. Monstroso’: An Eighteenth-Century Marriage in Life and Fiction
- Further Reading