Emily Dickinson Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- Emily Dickinson: A Poet Restored
- Emily Dickinson's Prose
- 'The Wildest Word': The Habit of Renunciation
- 'Chastisement of Beauty': A Mode of the Religious Sublime in Dickinson's Poetry
- Queen of Calvary: Spirituality in Emily Dickinson
- Names and Verbs: Influences on the Poet's Language
- Dickinson's Discontinuous Lyric Self
- Welcome and Beware: The Reader and Emily Dickinson's Figurative Language
- The Development of Dickinson's Style
- Her Moment of Brocade: The Reconstruction of Emily Dickinson
- Locating a Feminist Critical Practice: Between the Kingdom and the Glory
- The Pea That Duty Locks: Lesbian and Feminist-Heterosexual Readings of Emily Dickinson's Poetry
- 'Compound Manner': Emily Dickinson and the Metaphysical Poets
- Dickinson and the Process of Death
- Poetry Readers and Reading in the 1890's: Emily Dickinson's First Reception
- 'He Asked If I Was His': The Seductions of Emily Dickinson
- Further Reading