Dorothy Wordsworth Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- Editor's Literary Record
- Review of Dorothy Wordsworth
- The Structure of the Picturesque: Dorothy Wordsworth's Journals
- On the Autobiographical Present: Dorothy Wordsworth's Grasmere Journals
- Dorothy Wordsworth's Journals: Putting Herself Down
- Individual in Community: Dorothy Wordsworth in Conversation with William
- ‘I shall be beloved—I want no more’: Dorothy Wordsworth's Rhetoric and the Appeal to Feeling in The Grasmere Journals
- Dorothy Wordsworth and the Pleasures of Recognition: An Approach to the Travel Journals
- Mother Nature's Other Natures: Landscape in Women's Writing, 1770-1830
- Dorothy Wordsworth's Journals and the Engendering of Poetry
- Reading Pain and the Feminine Body in Romantic Writing: The Examples of Dorothy Wordsworth and Sara Coleridge
- ‘Why Should I wish for Words?’: Literacy, Articulation, and the Borders of Literary Culture
- Immersion
- Big Brother Is Watching You: Dorothy Wordsworth's Alfoxden and Grasmere Journals
- Wandering Women: Dorothy Wordsworth's Grasmere Journals and the Discourse on Female Vagrancy
- William and Dorothy: A Case Study in the Hermeneutics of Disparagement
- Texted Selves: Dorothy and William Wordsworth in The Grasmere Journals
- Writing Against, Writing Through: Subjectivity, Vocation, and Authorship in the Work of Dorothy Wordsworth
- Further Reading