Jean Rhys Criticism
- Rhys, Jean (Vol. 2)
- Rhys, Jean (Vol. 4)
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Rhys, Jean (Vol. 19)
- Introduction
- The World of Jean Rhys's Short Stories
- A Girl from Dominica
- Turned Away by the Tropics
- Broken Heart
- The Odd Career of Jean Rhys
- Books of 'The Times': 'Smile Please'
- Books: 'Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography'
- Life & Letters: 'Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography'
- Jean Rhys in Fact and Fiction
- Dark Smile, Devilish Saints
- Rhys, Jean (Vol. 14)
- Rhys, Jean (Vol. 6)
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Rhys, Jean (Vol. 124)
- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Wide Sargasso Sea and the Gothic Mode
- Of Heroines and Victims: Jean Rhys and Jane Eyre
- Mr. Rochester's First Marriage: Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
- Mirror and Mask: Colonial Motifs in the Novels of Jean Rhys
- Jean Rhys on Insult and Injury
- Jean Rhys: Life's Unfinished Form
- Jean Rhys
- The Art and Economics of Destitution in Jean Rhys's After Leaving Mr. Mackenzie
- Man the Enemy
- 'And it Kept its Secret': Narration, Memory, and Madness in Jean Rhys' Wide Sargasso Sea
- The Artist Emerging
- The Secret of Wide Sargasso Sea
- Further Reading
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Rhys, Jean (Vol. 21)
- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- The Best Living English Novelist
- The 'Liberated' Woman in Jean Rhys's Later Fiction
- In a Dark Wood
- The World of Jean Rhys's Short Stories
- Jean Rhys with Elizabeth Vreeland
- The Later Writing
- The Short Fiction
- Arrangements in Silver and Grey: The Whistlerian Moment in the Short Fiction of Jean Rhys
- From The Left Bank to Sleep It Off, Lady: Other Visions of Disordered Life
- A review of The Collected Short Stories
- Jean Rhys's Feminism: Theory Against Practice
- Jean Rhys on Herself as a Writer
- European or Caribbean: Jean Rhys and the Language of Exile
- Further Reading
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Rhys, Jean (Vol. 76)
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- ‘There Is No Penny and No Slot’: Jean Rhys's Late Stories
- Jean Rhys, Paul Theroux, and the Imperial Road
- Rite of Reply: The Shorter Fictions of Jean Rhys
- Modernity, Voice, and Window-Breaking: Jean Rhys's ‘Let Them Call It Jazz’
- The 1840s to the 1900s: The Creole and the Postslavery West Indies
- Writing in the Margins
- Jean Rhys's Art of the Short Story
- The Left Bank and Other Stories
- Brief Encounters: Rhys and the Craft of the Short Story
- An Antillean Voice
- Literary Foremother: Jean Rhys's ‘Sleep It Off, Lady’ and Two Jamaican Poems