Nathaniel Lee Criticism
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Essays
- The Unconventional Heroic Plays of Nathaniel Lee
- The Political Implications in Lee's Constantine the Great
- Introduction to Lucius Junius Brutus
- Introduction to The Rival Queens
- Psychological Myth as Tragedy: Nathaniel Lee's Lucius Junius Brutus
- The Satiric Design of Lee's The Princess of Cleve
- Nero and the Politics of Nathaniel Lee
- Hero as Endangered Species: Structure and Idea in Lee's Sophonisba
- Providence and the Fallen Psyche: Caesar Borgia; Son of Pope Alexander the Sixth: A Tragedy (1679)
- Affective Tragedy
- Heroics Satirized by ‘Mad Nat. Lee’
- The Dryden-Lee Collaboration: Oedipus and The Duke of Guise
- ‘La Princesse de Cleves’ on the English Stage: A 1681 Adaptation by Nathaniel Lee
- Adulteration or Adaptation? Nathaniel Lee's Princess of Cleve and Its Sources
- Further Reading