Brenda Ameter, "Samuel Johnson's View of America: A Moral Judgment, Based on Conscience, Not Compromise," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 71-77.
Sadrul Amir, "Some Aspects of Johnson as a Critic," Dhaka University Studies Part A, 42:1 (1985), 40-58.
Hugh Amory, Dreams of a Poet Doomed at Last to Wake a Lexicographer (Cambridge, Mass.: Houghton Library, 1986). Pp. 8. 250 copies printed for the Johnsonians.
David R. Anderson, "Johnson and the Problem of Religious Verse," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 41-57.
David R. Anderson, "Classroom Texts: The Teacher, the Anthology," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 3-7.
David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb, eds., Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson (New York: MLA, 1993). Pp. x + 152. Reviews:
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 42:3 (Sept. 1995), 402-403.
Eric Anderson, "Robert Anderson: Johnson's Other Scottish Biographer," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1992), 1-7.
Christopher Andreae, "Exaggerate, Said Dr. Johnson," The Christian Science Monitor, 31 Oct. 1985, p. 34.
[Anon.], A Short-Title Catalog of Eighteenth Century Editions of Dr. Samuel Johnson's "Dictionary" in Special Collections, the Library of the School of Library and Information Science, the University of Western Ontario (London, Ont.: Univ. of Western Ontario, 1985).
[Anon.], "Boswell Find," The Times, 6 June 1985, p. 5h. Two newly discovered letters -- one by Johnson, one by Boswell -- in Canberra National Library.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson by Mrs. Thrale: The 'Anecdotes' of Mrs. Piozzi in Their Original Form," The New Yorker, 61 (30 Dec. 1985), 80.
[Anon.], "Boswell on Johnson on Conversation," The Christian Science Monitor, 3 June 1986, p. 42.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson's Dog," The Economist, 26 Dec. 1987, p. 7.
[Anon.], "Samuel Johnson's Tics," FDA Consumer, 22 (Sept. 1988), 29.
[Anon.], Samuel Johnson, Writer, 1709-1784 (Falls Church, Va.: Landmark Films, 1988). Videocassette.
[Anon.], Samuel Johnson, Author for All Seasons: An Exhibition of Manuscripts & Books from the Library of Loren & Frances Rothschild Held at the Doheny Memorial Library, University of Southern California (Pacific Palisades and Los Angeles: Rasselas Press & the USC Fine Arts Press, 1988). Pp. 33.
[Anon.], "Guests Outside Dr Samuel Johnson's House at 17 Gough Square, off Fleet Street, for its Reopening," The Independent, 24 May 1990, p. 6.
[Anon.], "Down into Egypt," Philosophy, 65:254 (Oct. 1990), 395-97. Editorial.
[Anon.], "Dr Johnson Relic May Be Replaced," The Independent, 11 March 1991, p. 2.
[Anon.], "'The Mantle of Johnson Descends on Gisbourne': Samuel Johnson and Some Controversies of the 1820's," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1991), 29-33.
[Anon.], "The Gobblies at the Gate," The Economist, 325:7786 (21 Nov. 1992), 104.
[Anon.], "John Wilkes, Esq., and Dr. Samuel Johnson," The Atlantic, 271:3 (March 1993), 87.
[Anon.], "Boxing: Dr Johnson's Plea Rings Out over Another Lull in Boxing," The Sunday Telegraph, 10 Oct. 1993, p. 5.
[Anon.], "On the Road with Johnson & Boswell & Co.," Telegraph Magazine, The Daily Telegraph, 11 Sept. 1993, p. 36.
[Anon.], "Samuel Johnson, Man of the Theater," New York, 28:19 (8 May 1995), 83.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson's Regard for Truth," The Herald (Glasgow), 17 Feb. 1996, p. 14.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson's Zeal for Gaelic," The Herald (Glasgow), 26 Feb. 1996, p. 12.
[Anon.], "Johnson's Bestiary," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1997), 24-29. Humorous piece on Dictionary definitions on animals.
[Anon.], "An Original 'Fame' School," Leicester Mercury, 16 June 1998, p. 4. Brief profile of the Dixie Grammar School in Market Bosworth.
Kelly Anspaugh, "Traveling to the Lighthouse with Woolf and Johnson," Virginia Woolf Miscellany, 45 (Spring 1995), 4-5.
Jonathan Arac, "The Media of Sublimity: Johnson and Lamb on King Lear," Studies in Romanticism, 26:2 (Summer 1987), 209-20.
Helen Ashmore, introd., Frances Reynolds and Samuel Johnson: A Keepsake to Mark the 286th Birthday of Samuel Johnson and the 49th Annual Dinner of the Johnsonians (Cambridge: Houghton Library, 1995). Pp. 28. At Harvard University, 15 Sept. 1995.
Helen Ashmore, "'Do Not, My Love, Burn Your Papers': Samuel Johnson and Frances Reynolds: A New Document," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 165-94.
James Atlas, "Dr. Johnson's Open House," House & Garden, 159 (Dec. 1987), 12.
James Atlas, "Holmes on the Case," The New Yorker, 70:29 (19 Sept. 1994), 57-65. On Holmes's Dr. Johnson and Mr. Savage.
James Atlas, "Over the Sea to Skye," Condé Nast Traveler, 31 (June 1996), 120-29.
Amad Awwad, "Samuel Johnson and the Issue of Holy Matrimony," M.A. Thesis, California State University, Hayward, 1986 (not seen).
Bernard Bailyn, "Does a Freeborn Englishman Have a Right to Emigrate?" American Heritage, 37 (1986), 24-31.
Paul Baines, "'Putting a Book out of Place': Johnson, Ossian and the Highland Tour," Durham University Journal, 53:2 (July 1992), 235-48.
Paul Baines, "Chatterton and Johnson: Authority and Filitation in the 1770s," in Thomas Chatterton and Romantic Culture, ed. Nick Groom (New York: St. Martin's, 1999), pp. 172-87.
John D. Baird, "'A Louse and a Flea': A Source for Johnson's Rejoinder," N&Q, 37:3 (Sept. 1990), 312.
Russell Baker, "Typical American Noises," New York Times, 146 (29 March 1997), 19(L).
Barry Baldwin, "Samuel Johnson and the Classics," Hellas: A Journal of Poetry and the Humanities, 2:2 (Fall 1991), 227-38.
Barry Baldwin, "Samuel Johnson and Vergil," Prudentia, 24 (1992), 37-63.
Barry Baldwin, "Johnson's Conglobulating Swallows," N&Q, 41:2 (June 1994), 199-206.
Barry Baldwin, "The Mysterious Letter 'M' in Johnson's Diaries," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 131-46.
Barry Baldwin, "A Classical Source for Johnson on Augustus and Lord Bute," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec. 1995), 467-68.
Barry Baldwin, "Samuel Johnson and Petronius," Petronian Society Newsletter, 25 (1995), 14-15.
Barry Baldwin, "Plautus in Johnson: An Unnoticed Quotation," N&Q, 43 (Sept. 1996), 305-306.
Laura Bandiera, Settecento e malinconia: saggi di letteratura inglese (Bologna: Patron Editore, 1995). Pp. 168. In Italian.
A. Banerjee, "Dr. Johnson's Daughter: Jane Austen and Northanger Abbey," English Studies, 71 (April 1990), 113-24.
Michel Baridon, "On the Relation of Ideology to Form in Johnson's Style," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 85-105.
Brooke Ann Barker, "The Representation of Prostitutes in Eighteenth-Century British Literature," Dissertation Abstracts International, 53 (1993), 2377A.
Carol Barnett, Elegy: An Epitaph on Claudy Phillips, a Musician (1988). Music by Carol Barnett, with words by Samuel Johnson. Holograph score at New York Public Library.
Louise K. Barnett, "Dr. Johnson's Mother: Maternal Ideology and the Life of Savage," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 304 (1992), 856-59.
Joseph F. Bartolomeo, "Johnson, Richardson, and the Audience for Fiction," N&Q, 33:4 (Dec. 1986), 517.
Joseph F. Bartolomeo, A New Species of Criticism: Eighteenth-Century Discourse on the Novel (Newark: Univ. of Delaware Press, 1994), chapter 2 ("Cracking Facades of Authority: Richardson, Fielding, and Johnson"), pp. 47-87.
Philip Edward Baruth, "Recognizing the Author-Function: Alternatives to Greene's Black-And-Red Book of Johnson Logia," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 35-59.
Philip Edward Baruth, "Positioning the (Auto)Biographical Self: Ideological Fictions of Self in Boswell, Johnson, and John Bunyan," Dissertation Abstracts International, 54:3 (Sept. 1993), 936A. Univ. of California, Irvine.
James G. Basker, "Dancing Dogs, Women Preachers and the Myth of Johnson's Misogyny," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 63-90.
James G. Basker, "Scotticisms and the Problem of Cultural Identity in Eighteenth-Century Britain," Eighteenth-Century Life, 15:1-2 (Feb.-May 1991), 81-95; reprinted in Sociability and Society in Eighteenth-Century Scotland (Edinburgh: Mercat Press, 1993).
James G. Basker, "Resisting Authority; Or, Johnson and the Wizard of Oz," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 28-34.
James G. Basker, "Samuel Johnson and the American Common Reader," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 3-30.
James Basker, "Samuel Johnson and the African-American Reader," The New Rambler, D:10 (1994-95), 47-57.
James G. Basker, "Coming of Age in Johnson's England: Adolescence in the Rambler," in Les Ages de la vie en Grande-Bretagne au XVIIIe siècle, ed. Serge Soupel (Paris: Sorbonne Nouvelle, 1995), pp. 197-212.
James G. Basker, "Dictionary Johnson amidst the Dons of Sidney: A Chapter in Eighteenth-Century Cambridge History," in Sidney Sussex College Cambridge: Historical Essays in Commemoration of the Quatercentenary, ed. D. E. D. Beales and H. B. Nisbet (Boydell Press, 1996), pp. 131-44.
James G. Basker, "Radical Affinities: Mary Wollstonecraft and Samuel Johnson," in Tradition in Transition: Women Writers, Marginal Texts, and the Eighteenth-Century Canon, ed. Alvaro Ribeiro and James G. Basker (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996), pp. 41-55.
James G. Basker, "An Eighteenth-Century Critique of Eurocentrism: Samuel Johnson and the Plight of Native Americans," in La Grande-Bretagne et l'Europe des Lumières, ed. Serge Soupel (Paris: Presses de la Sorbonne Nouvelle, 1996), pp. 207-20.
James G. Basker, "Samuel Johnson," in Britain in the Hanoverian Age 1714-1837, ed. Gerald Newman et al. (New York: Garland, 1997), pp. 378-80.
James G. Basker, "Myth upon Myth: Johnson, Gender, and the Misogyny Question," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 175-87.
Lionel Basney, "'His Proper Business': Johnson's Adjustment to Society," Texas Studies in Literature and Language, 32:3 (Fall 1990), 397-416.
Lionel Basney, "Prudence in the Life of Savage," ELN, 28:2 (Dec. 1990), 17-24.
Lionel Basney, "Narrative and Judgment in the Life of Savage," Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly, 14:2 (Spring 1991), 153-64.
Jonathan Bate, "Johnson and Shakespeare," The New Rambler, C:25 (1985-86), 11-13.
Jonathan Bate, "Johnson, Garrick and Macbeth," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 8-12.
Walter Jackson Bate, A Life of Allegory (Savannah, Armstrong State College, 1995). Videocassettes of the Conrad Aiken Video Lectures Series. Separate parts: "Samuel Johnson's Four Great Themes," "Samuel Johnson: The Dark Years"; "Johnson, Psychology & English Prose Style"; "Samuel Johnson: The Final Years"; "Boswell" (not seen).
Walter Jackson Bate, Samuel Johnson, 2nd ed. (Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 1998). Pp. xxii + 646. Reviews:
Bernice Grohskopf, The Virginian-Pilot, 13 Sept. 1998, p. J2.
James L. Battersby, "Life, Art, and the Lives of the Poets," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 26-56.
James L. Battersby, "The 'Lame and Impotent' Conclusion to The Vanity of Human Wishes Reconsidered," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 227-55.
John Beer, "Coleridge, Wordsworth and Johnson," Journal of the English Language and Literature (Seoul), 33 (1987), 25-42.
Michele A. Beilman, "Anthropological Particulars: Johnson's Ambivalent Pastoral Dream," Wascana Review of Contemporary Poetry and Short Fiction, 27:1 (Spring 1992), pp. 73-89.
V. I. Berezkina, "Iz istorii zhanra esse v angliiskoi literature XVIII v.: K probleme istoricheskoi poetiki zhanra," Filologicheskie Nauki, 4 (1991), pp. 49-61. In Russian.
Lisa Berglund, "Learning to Read The Rambler," Dissertation Abstracts International, 56:4 (Oct. 1995), 1363A. University of Virginia.
Lisa Berglund, "Writing to Mr. Rambler: Samuel Johnson and Exemplary Autobiography," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 29 (1999), 241-59.
Gina Berkeley, "Verses after Dr. Johnson," The New Rambler, D:10 (1994-95), 64.
Kevin J. Berland, "'The Air of a Porter': Lichtenberg and Lavater Test Physiognomy by Looking at Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 219-30.
Carol Ray Berninger, "Across Celtic Borders: Johnson, Boswell, Piozzi, Scott," Dissertation Abstracts International, 54 (1994), 4099A. Drew University.
A. M. Berrett, "Francis Barber's Marriage and Children: A Correction," N&Q, 35 (June 1988), 193.
James Biester, "Samuel Johnson on Letters," Rhetorica, 6:2 (Spring 1988), 145-66.
Anne Bindslev, "'Introducing Herself into the Chair of Criticism': Dr. Johnson, Monsieur Voltaire and Mrs. Montagu," in Proceedings from the Third Nording Conference for English Studies, Hässelby, 25-27 September 1986, ed. Ishrad Lindblad and Magnus Ljung, 2 vols. (Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiskell, 1987), pp. 519-31.
Harold Bloom, ed., Modern Critical Interpretations: James Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson (New York: Chelsea House, 1986). Pp. viii + 160. A collection of previously published essays.
Harold Bloom, ed. Modern Critical Views: Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell( New York: Chelsea House, 1986). A collection of previously published essays. Pp. viii + 280. Reviews:
Steven Lynn, South Atlantic Review, 55:2 (May 1990), 143-46.
Harold Bloom, The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1994), pp. 183-202.
Ronald Blythe, ed., The Pleasures of Diaries: Four Centuries of Private Writing (New York: Pantheon Books, 1989). Pp xi + 388. Includes selections from and discussions of Johnson's diaries.
Fredric Bogel, "Johnson and the Role of Authority," in The New Eighteenth Century: Theory, Politics, English Literature, ed. Felicity Nussbaum and Laura Brown (New York: Methuen, 1987), pp. 189-209. Reviews:
Howard Weinbrot, "The New Eighteenth Century and the New Mythology," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 353-407.
Fredric V. Bogel, The Dream of My Brother: An Essay on Johnson's Authority (Victoria, B.C.: Univ. of Victoria, 1990). Pp. 94. Reviews:
Stuart Sherman, Johnsonian News Letter, 50:3-51:3 (Sept. 1990-Sept. 1991), 8-9.
Gary Boire, "'Wide-wasting Pest': Social History in The Vanity of Human Wishes," Eighteenth-Century Life, 12:2 (May 1988), 73-85.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "John Bell's Poets of Great Britain: The 'Little Trifling Edition' Revisited," Modern Philology, 85:2 (Nov. 1987), 128-52.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "Bookselling and Canon-Making: The Trade Rivalry over the English Poets, 1776-1783," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 19 (1989), 53-69.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "The Jenyns Review: 'Leibnitian Reasoning' on Trial," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 92-98.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "Patchwork and Piracy: John Bell's 'Connected System of Biography' and the Use of Johnson's Prefaces," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 193-228.
William Brian Booth, "Samuel Johnson and Work," Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:11 (May 1991), 3750A.
[James Boswell], Boswell's London Journal (Princeton: Films for the Humanities, 1987). One videocassette (not seen).
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson (Ashland, Oregon: Classics on Tape, 1988-90). Read by Jim Killavey. Recording on 24 audio cassettes (not seen).
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1990). Pp. xvii + 618.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, ed. and abr. by John Canning (London: Methuen, 1991). Pp. xviii + 366.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson (London: David Campbell, 1992). Pp. xlix + 613.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, translated (into Hebrew) by Tova Rozen (Jerusalem: Carmel, 1992).
James Boswell, Samuel Johnson's Life and the Most Meaningful Events of His Times (Gloucester: Gloucester Art, 1993).
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, with an introduction by Claude Rawson (New York: Everyman's Library, 1993).
James Boswell, James Boswell's Life of Johnson: An Edition of the Original Manuscript in Four Volumes, I: 1709-1765, vol. 1 ed. Marshall Waingrow (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1994); vol. 2, ed. Bruce Redford (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1999). Pp. xxxix + 518; xviii + 303. Reviews:
John L. Abbott, Eighteenth-Century Scotland, 10 (1996), 14;
Linda Colley, London Review of Books, 17:18 (1995), 14-15 (with another work);
Henry Hitchings, TLS, 26 Nov. 1999, p. 33;
Alan Ingram, Yearbook of English Studies, 28 (1998), 319-20;
Allen Reddick, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 405-14;
Michael F. Suarez, S.J., TLS, 15 Dec. 1995, pp. 11-12;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 48 (1997), 114-16.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson [abridgment] (London: Naxos AudioBooks, Ltd., 1994). Two audio CDs read by Billy Hartman (not seen).
James Boswell, From the Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D [abridgment] (Edinburgh: Akros, 1995). Pp. 16. Limited edition of 130 numbered copies.
James Boswell, La vida del doctor Samuel Johnson, tr. and abr. by Antonio Dorta, with a preface by Fernando Savater, 2nd ed. (Madrid: Espasa Calpe, 1998). Pp. 265.
Ann Bowden and William B. Todd, "Scott's Commentary on The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 229-48.
James T. Boulton, "The Wisdom of Samuel Johnson," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1997), 11-23.
Toni O'Shaughnessy Bowers, "Maternal Ideology and Matriarchal Authority: British Literature and the Making of Middle-Class Motherhood, 1680-1750," Dissertation Abstracts International, 52:9 (March 1992), 3289A. Stanford University.
Toni O'Shaughnessy Bowers, "Critical Complicities: Savage Mothers, Johnson's Mother, and the Containment of Maternal Difference," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 115-46.
Gay W. Brack, "Tetty and Samuel Johnson: The Romance and the Reality," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 147-78.
Gay Wilson Brack, "Sir John Hawkins, Biographer of Johnson: A Rhetorical Analysis," Dissertation Abstracts International, 53:3 (Sept. 1992), 815A. Arizona State University.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Epitaph on a Duckling," Books at Iowa, 45 (Nov. 1986), 62-79.
O M Brack, Jr., "Surviving as a Professional Author: The Case of Samuel Johnson," The New Rambler, D:2 (1986-87), 19-21.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson Bicentenary Exhibitions and Catalogues," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 451-65.
O M Brack, Jr., "The Gentleman's Magazine, Concealed Printing, and the Texts of Samuel Johnson's Lives of Admiral Robert Blake and Sir Francis Drake," Studies in Bibliography, 40 (1987), 140-46.
O M Brack, Jr., "Johnson's Life of Admiral Blake and the Development of a Biographical Technique," Modern Philology, 85:4 (May 1988), 523-31.
O M Brack, Jr., "Johnson's Use of Sources in the Life of Sir Francis Drake," Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 42 (1988), 197-215.
O M Brack, Jr., Bred a Bookseller: Samuel Johnson on Vellum Books: A New Essay for The Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California (Mesa, Arizona: Lofgreen's Printing, 1990). Pp. 8.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson Edits for the Booksellers: Sir Thomas Browne's 'Christian Morals' (1756) and 'The English Works of Roger Ascham' (1761)," Library Chronicle of the University of Texas, 21:3-4 (1991), pp. 12-39.
O M Brack, Jr., ed., Samuel Johnson and Thomas Maurice (Privately printed, 1992). Pp. 14. For the Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California, 1991, and the Johnson Society of the Central Region, 1992.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Preface to Abbé Prevost's Memoirs of a Man of Quality," Studies in Bibliography, 47 (1994), 155-64.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Translations of Jean Pierre de Crousaz's Examen and Commentaire," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 60-84.
O M Brack, Jr., comp., Samuel Johnson in New Albion: A Descriptive Census of Rare and Useful Johnson Books and Manuscripts and Johnsoniana Now Located in California, with an introduction by Loren Rothschild (New York: The Johnsonians; Los Angeles: The Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California, 1997). Pp. 98.
O M Brack, Jr., and Mary Early, "Samuel Johnson's Proposals for the Harleian Miscellany," Studies in Bibliography, 45 (1992), 127-30.
Susan D. Bradley, "Cognitive Subjectivity and the Modern Informal Essay: A Study of Montaigne and Johnson," M.A. Thesis, Witchita State University, 1994 (not seen).
Geoffrey W. Brand, "A Night with Venus and a Year with Mercury: The Germ Theory in the Eighteenth Century," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 1 (1997), 17-21.
Richard Braverman, "The Narrative Architecture of Rasselas," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 91-111.
Peter M. Briggs, "'News from the Little World': A Critical Glance at Eighteenth-Century British Advertising," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 23 (1993), 29-45.
Adrian Bristow, ed., Dr Johnson and Mrs Thrale's Tour in North Wales 1774 (Wrexham: Bridge Books, 1995). Pp. 147.
J. Brody, "Constantes et modeles de la critique anti-'manieriste' à l'age 'classique,'" Rivista di itterature moderne e comparate, 40:2 (1987), 95-121.
Bertrand H. Bronson and J. M. O'Meara, eds., Selections from Johnson on Shakespeare (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1986). Pp. xxxvii + 373. Reviews:
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 462-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 4;
Howard Mills, English, 39:163 (Spring 1990), 65-70 (with other works);
J. D. Fleeman, N&Q, 35 (March 1988), 98-99.
Christopher Brooks, "Johnson's Insular Mind and the Analogy of Travel: A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland," Essays in Literature, 18:1 (Spring 1991), pp. 21-36.
Christopher Brooks, "Nekayah's Courage and Female Wisdom," College Language Association Journal, 36:1 (Sept. 1992), 52-72.
Anthony E. Brown, Boswellian Studies: A Bibliography, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh: Edinburgh Univ. Press, 1991). Pp. xiii + 176. Reviews:
Pat Rogers, The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 40-41.
Morris R. Brownell, "Johnson and Mauritius Lowe," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 111-126.
Morris R. Brownell, "'Dr. Johnson's Ghost': Genesis of a Satirical Engraving," Huntington Library Quarterly, 50:4 (Autumn 1987), 338-57.
Morris R. Brownell, Samuel Johnson's Attitude to the Arts (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989). Pp. xvii + 195. Reviews:
Charles A. Knight, JEGP, 90:2 (1991), 245-46;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 38:1 (1991), 113-14;
P. D. McGlynn, Choice, 27:4 (Dec. 1989), 1967;
Carey McIntosh, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 404-408;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 49:3-50:2 (Sept. 1989-June 1990), 20;
Ronald Paulson, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 23:3 (Spring 1990), 358-65;
Claude Rawson, London Review of Books, 13:15 (1991), 15-17;
Irène Simon, English Studies, 72:3 (1991), 277-80;
Terry Skeats, Library Journal, 114:5 (15 March 1989), 17;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 42 (1991), 120-21.
Morris R. Brownell, "A Bull in the China Shop of Taste: Johnson's Prejudice against the Arts Illustrated," The New Rambler, D:6 (1990-91), 28-31.
Martine Watson Brownley, "The Antagonisms and Affinities of Johnson and Gibbon," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 16 (1986), 183-95.
Mary Bryden, "Samuel Johnson and Beckett's Happy Days," N&Q, 40:4 (Dec. 1993), 503-504.
Anthony Burgess, "The Dictionary Makers," Wilson Quarterly, 17:3 (1993), 104-10.
John J. Burke, Jr., "The Documentary Value of Boswell's Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 349-72.
John J. Burke, Jr., "When the Falklands First Demanded an Historian: Johnson, Junius, and the Making of History in 1771," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 291-310.
John J. Burke, Jr., "The Originality of Boswell's Version of Johnson's Quarrel with Lord Chesterfield," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 143-61.
John J. Burke, Jr., "Talk, Dialogue, Conversation, and Other Kinds of Speech Acts in Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson," in Compendious Conversations: The Method of Dialogue in the Early Enlightenment, ed. Kevin L. Cope (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1992), pp. 65-79.
John J. Burke, Jr., "Boswell and the Text of Johnson's Logia," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 9 (1998), 25-46. See also Greene, "'Beyond Probability': A Boswellian Act of Faith."
[Add to item 10/6:376] John J. Burke, Jr., and Donald Kay, eds., The Unknown Samuel Johnson (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1983). Reviews:
Frederick M. Keener, Yearbook of English Studies, 17 (1987), 299-300;
Steven Lynn, South Atlantic Review, 51:1 (Jan. 1986), 128-30 (with other works).
Robert Burrowes, Essay on the Stile of Doctor Samuel Johnson, ed. Frank H. Ellis (New York: AMS Press, 1992). Pp. xxii + 56. Reviews:
Greg Clingham, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 9 (1986), 248-49.
Jamie Bush, "Authorial Authority: Johnson's Life of Savage and Nabokov's Nikolai Gogol," Biography, 19:1 (Winter 1996), 19-40.
A. J. L. Busst, "Scottish Second Sight: The Rise and Fall of a European Myth," European Romantic Review, 5:2 (1995), 149-77.
Annette Cafarelli, "Narrative, Sequence, and Biography: Johnson and Romantic Prose," Dissertation Abstracts International, 46:9 (March 1986), pp. 2697A-2698A.
Annette Wheeler Cafarelli, "Johnson's Lives of the Poets and the Romantic Canon," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 403-35.
Annette Cafarelli, Prose in the Age of Poets: Romanticism and Biographical Narrative from Johnson to De Quincey (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1990). Pp. vi + 301.
Annette Wheeler Cafarelli, "Johnson and Women: Demasculinizing Literary History," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 61-114.
Michael Caldwell, "Dr. Clark and Mr. Holmes: Speculation in Johnsonian Biography," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 133-48.
Craig R. Callen, "Comments: Kicking Rocks With Dr. Johnson: A Comment on Professor Allen's Theory," Cardozo Law Review, 13:2-3 (Nov. 1991), 423.
Charles Leo Campbell, "Image and Symbol in Rasselas: Narrative Form and 'The Flux of Life,'" English Studies in Canada, 16:3 (Sept. 1990), 263-77.
Charles Campbell, "Johnson's Arab: Anti-Orientalism in Rasselas," Abhath al-Yarmouk, 12:1 (1994), 51-66.
Ian Campbell, "Boswell's Life of Johnson," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1996), 1-10.
John Ashton Cannon, Samuel Johnson and the Politics of Hanoverian England (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994). Pp. vii + 326. Reviews:
Jeremy Black, N&Q, 42 (Dec. 1995), 499-500;
O M Brack, Jr., Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 49:2 (1995), 169-74 (with other works);
Linda Colley, TLS, 4 Aug. 1995, pp. 6-7 (with another work);
H. T. Dickinson, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 19:2 (Autumn 1996), 220;
M. Fitzpatrick, History Today, 46:5 (May 1996), 60 (with another work);
E. H. Gould, Journal of Modern History, 69:4 (Dec. 1997), 828-29 (with another work);
Donald J. Greene, "The Double Tradition of Samuel Johnson's Politics," Huntington Library Quarterly, 59:1 (1997), 105-23 (with another work);
Nicholas Hudson, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 9 (1998), 337-47;
Thomas Kaminski, Philological Quarterly, 76:1 (Winter 1997), 101-104;
G. Lamoine, Etudes Anglaises, 49:1 (Jan.-March 1996), 90-91;
Jack Lynch, Choice, 33:1 (Sept. 1995), 110;
J. Phillips, Albion, 28:1 (Spring 1996), 109-11;
Murray G. H. Pittock, JEGP, 95:4 (Oct. 1996), 558-60;
Christopher Reid, The New Rambler, D:11 (1995-96), 62-63;
James J. Sack, American Historical Review, 101:3 (June 1996), 847-48;
P. D. G. Thomas, English Historical Review, 112 (June 1997), 778;
John Wiltshire, English Language Notes, 34:1 (Sept. 1996), 98-104 (with another work).
Erik Carlquist, "Samuel Johnson före Boswell," Kulturtidskriften Horisont, 34:2 (1987), 10-11. In Swedish.
Geoffrey Carnall, "A Conservative Mind under Stress: Aspects of Johnson's Political Writings," in Re-Viewing Samuel Johnson, ed. Nalini Jain (Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1991), pp. 30-46.
Wallace Chafe, "Cowper's Connoisseur #138 and Samuel Johnson," Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and Linguistics, (1985), pp. 214-25.
Sir Robert Chambers, A Course of Lectures on the English Law: Delivered at the University of Oxford 1767-1773, ed. Thomas M. Curley, 2 vols. (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1986). Pp. xix + 483; xv + 445. Reviews:
John L. Abbot, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 498-503;
David Ibbetson, N&Q, 35 (1988), 540-41;
Jeffrey Hackney, Review of English Studies, 39 (Nov. 1988), 561-62;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 46:2-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 1-2.
David Chandler, "John Henry Colls and the Remarks on the Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec. 1995), 469-71.
Naresh Chandra, "Dr. Johnson and the English Language," in Essays on Dr. Samuel Johnson, ed. T. R. Sharma (Meerut, India: Shalabh, 1986), pp. 5-24.
Chester Chapin, "Religion and the Nature of Samuel Johnson's Toryism," Cithara: Essays in the Judaeo-Christian Tradition, 29:2 (May 1990), 38-54.
Chester Chapin, "Samuel Johnson, Anthropologist," Eighteenth-Century Life, 19 (Nov. 1995), 22-37.
Chester Chapin, "Samuel Johnson and the Locke-Stillingfleet Controversy," N&Q, 44:2 (June 1997), 210-11.
Chester Chapin, "Samuel Johnson, Samuel Clarke and the Toleration of Heresy," Enlightenment and Dissent, 16 (1997), 136-50.
James Aaron Chapman, "The Foundation of Samuel Johnson's Morality," M.A. Thesis, University of Southern Mississippi, 1995 (not seen).
Warren Chernaik, "Johnson and the Imagination," The New Rambler, E:1 (1997-98), 42-49.
Charles Waddell Chesnutt, Who and Why Was Samuel Johnson (Akron: Northern Ohio Bibliophilic Society, 1991). Pp. iv + 19. With a preface by Robert A. Tibbetts. Keepsake volume of the text of a 1911 speech by Chesnutt.
Leslie A. Chilton, "Samuel Johnson and the Adventures of Telemachus," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1993), 8-13.
Chung-Ho Chung, "The Great Cham and the Mirror: An Essay on the Multiple Perspectives in Samuel Johnson's Literary Criticism," Dissertation Abstracts International, 48:9 (March 1988), 2342A.
Jonathan Clark, "The Heartfelt Toryism of Dr. Johnson," TLS, 14 Oct. 1994, pp. 17-18.
J. C. D. Clark, Samuel Johnson: Literature, Religion and English Cultural Politics from the Restoration to Romanticism (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1994). Pp. xiv + 270. Reviews:
O M Brack, Jr., Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 49:2 (1995), 169-74 (with other works);
John Cannon, The English Historical Review, 112:446 (April 1997), 491-93;
Matthew M. Davis, Modern Age, 39:1 (Winter 1997), 73-76;
Paul Dean, "Augustans and Romantics," English Studies, 77:1 (Jan. 1996), 81-85 (with other works);
M. Fitzpatrick, History Today, 46:5 (May 1996), 60 (with another work);
Mark Goldie, Political Studies, 43:4 (Dec. 1995), 777;
E. H. Gould, Journal of Modern History, 69:4 (Dec. 1997), 828-29 (with another work);
Donald Greene, "The Double Tradition of Samuel Johnson's Politics," Huntington Library Quarterly, 59:1 (1997), 105-23 (with another work);
John Gross, Sunday Telegraph, 13 Nov. 1994, p. 10;
H. C. Kraus, Historische Zeitschrift, 263:1 (Aug. 1996), 233-34;
R. B. Levis, Church History, 66:4 (Dec. 1997), 845-46;
P. Monod, American Historical Review, 102:1 (Feb. 1997), 103-104;
David Nokes, TLS, 25 Nov. 1994, pp. 8-9;
J. T. Scanlan, Religion & Literature, 29:1 (Spring 1997), 95-101;
John Wiltshire, English Language Notes, 34:1 (Sept. 1996), 98-104 (with another work);
David Womersley, The Historical Journal, 39:2 (June 1996), 511-20 (with other works).
J. C. D. Clark, "The Politics of Samuel Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 27-56.
J. C. D. Clark, "The Cultural Identity of Samuel Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 15-70.
J. C. D. Clark, "Religious Affiliation and Dynastic Allegiance in Eighteenth-Century England: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine and Samuel Johnson," ELH, 64:4 (Winter 1997), 1029-67.
E. J. Clery, "Laying the Ground for Gothic: The Passage of the Supernatural from Truth to Spectacle," in Exhibited by Candlelight: Sources and Developments in the Gothic Tradition, ed. Valeria Tinkler-Villani, Peter Davidson, and Jane Stevenson (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1995), pp. 65-74.
[Add to item 3:250] James L. Clifford, Dictionary Johnson: Samuel Johnson's Middle Years (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1979). Reviews:
Garry Wills, The New Republic, 182 (2 Feb. 1980), 36-37.
Dorothy Peake Cline, "The Word Abused: Problematic Religious Language in Selected Prose Works of Swift, Wesley, and Johnson," Dissertation Abstracts International, 52:9 (March 1992), 3290A. University of Delaware.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson on Dryden and Pope," Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Cambridge, 1986.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson's Use of Two Restoration Poems in his 'Drury-Lane' Prologue," The New Rambler, D:1 (1985-86), 45-50.
G. J. Clingham, "'The Inequalities of Memory': Johnson's Epitaphs on Hogarth," English: The Journal of the English Association, 35:153 (Autumn 1986), 221-32.
Greg Clingham, "A Minor Source for Johnson's 'Life of Pope,'" Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1986-87), 53-54.
G. J. Clingham, "'Himself that Great Sublime': Johnson's Critical Thinking," Etudes Anglaises: Grande-Bretagne, Etats-Unis, 41:2 (April-June 1988), 165-78.
Gregory J. Clingham, "Johnson's Criticism of Dryden's Odes in Praise of St. Cecilia," Modern Language Studies, 18:1 (Winter 1988), 165-80.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson, Homeric Scholarship, and 'The Passes of the Mind,'" The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 113-70.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson's Prayers and Meditations and the 'Stolen Diary Problem': Reflections on a Biographical Quiddity," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 83-95.
Greg Clingham, ed., New Light on Boswell: Critical and Historical Essays on the Occasion of the Bicentenary of "The Life of Johnson" (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991). Pp. xix + 235. Reviews:
Paul K. Alkon, Newsletter of the Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California, (1991), 5;
Philip E. Baruth, Biography, 16 (1993), 59-64;
Fredric Bogel, Modern Philology, 91 (May 1994), 517-23;
Alan Bold, Herald Weekender, 29 June 1991;
English Studies, 73 (1992), 537-38;
Forum for Modern Language Studies, 28:3 (1992), 292-93;
James Gray, Dalhousie Review, 71 (1991-92), 502-507;
Irma S. Lustig, The Age of Johnson, 5 (1992), 447-51;
P. D. McGlynn, Choice, 29:6 (Feb. 1992), 3178;
William B. Ober, Verbatim, 18:4 (Spring 1992), 13-14;
John B. Radner, Eighteenth-Century Scotland, 6 (1992), 15-16;
Claude Rawson, London Review of Books, 29 Aug. 1991, p. 17;
Angus Ross, Scottish Literary Journal, 39 (1994), 9-12;
Stuart Sherman, Johnsonian News Letter, 51 (Sept. 1991), 10-12;
John B. Vance, South Atlantic Review, 58 (1993), 101-109;
William Wain, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 16 (1993), 84;
Marcus Walsh, Review of English Studies, 44 (1993), 428-29;
Robert Ziegler, Papers on Language & Literature, 29 (1993), 457-49.
Greg Clingham, "Truth and Artifice in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 207-29.
Greg Clingham, James Boswell: The Life of Johnson (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1992). Pp. xviii + 131. Landmarks of World Literature Series. Reviews:
Gene Blanton, South Atlantic Review, 59 (Spring 1994), 125-29;
John J. Burke, Jr., 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, & Inquiries in the Early Modern Era, 3 (1997), 409-16;
English Studies, 75 (1994), 555-56;
A. E. Jones, Choice, 30:9 (May 1993), 4836;
Thomas E. Kinsella, The Age of Johnson, 5 (1992), 452-56;
Laurence Urdang, Verbatim, 20 (Autumn 1993), 8-9 (with another work);
Karina Williamson, Scottish Literary Journal, 39 (1994), 12-14;
Thomas Woodman, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 18 (1995), 92-94;
William Zachs, Eighteenth-Century Scotland, 7 (1993), 30-31.
Greg Clingham, "Boswell's Historiography," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 307 (1993), 1765-69.
Greg Clingham, "Another and the Same: Johnson's Dryden," in Literary Transmission and Authority: Dryden and Other Writers, ed. Jennifer Brady and Earl Miner (Cambridge University Press, 1993), pp. 121-59.
Greg Clingham, "Double Writing: The Erotics of Narrative in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in James Boswell: Psychological Interpretations, ed. Donald J. Newman (New York: St. Martin's, 1995), pp. 189-214.
Greg Clingham, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997). Pp. xx + 266. Reviews:
Contemporary Review, 1584 (1 Jan. 1998), 54;
Peter Barry, English, 47 (Spring 1998), 81-87;
Matthew M. Davis, The New Rambler, D:12 (1996-97), 56-57;
Robert Devens, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21:2 (1998), 233-34;
Kathleen Kemmerer, East-Central Intelligencer, 13:2 (May 1999), 19-21;
G. Lamoine, Etudes anglaises, 51:3 (July-Sept. 1998), 347-48 (in French);
Jack Lynch, Choice, 35:11-12 (July-Aug. 1998), 6080;
Jack Lynch, Essays in Criticism, 49:1 (Jan. 1999), 75-81;
Alvaro Ribeiro, S.J., The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 292-302.
Greg Clingham, "Life and Literature in Johnson's Lives of the Poets," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 161-91.
G. J. Clingham and N. Hopkinson, "Johnson's Copy of the Iliad at Felbrigg Hall, Norfolk," The Book Collector, 37:4 (Winter 1988), 503-21.
Martin Clout, "Hester Thrale and the Globe Theatre," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 34-50.
Hamilton E. Cochrane, Boswell's Literary Art: An Annotated Bibliography of Critical Studies, 1900-1985 (New York: Garland, 1992). Pp. ix + 162.
S. G. Cohen, "Samuel Johnson (1709-1784), British Poet, Critic, Essayist, and Lexicographer," Allergy and Asthma Proceedings, 17:1 (Jan.-Feb. 1996), 52-55.
Frank Collings, "Dr. Johnson and his Medical Advisers," The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 3-18.
Michael Dennis Collins, "Taxation No Tyranny: Samuel Johnson, Barrister to the Crown," M.A. Thesis, California State University, Northridge, 1989 (not seen).
Syndy M. Conger, "Three Unlikely Fellow Travellers: Mary Wollstonecraft, Yorick, Samuel Johnson," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 305 (1992), 1667-68.
Donald N. Cook, "The History of Dr. Johnson's Summer-House," The New Rambler, C:24 (1983), 49-58.
Robert Cooperman, "Boswell on Dr. Johnson's Friend Mrs. Anna Williams," Antigonish Review, 64 (Winter 1986), 101. Poem on Anna Williams.
Kevin L. Cope, "Rational Hope, Rational Benevolence, and Johnson's Economy of Happiness," Eighteenth-Century Life, 10:3 (Oct. 1986), 104-21.
Kevin L. Cope, "Rational Hope, Rational Benevolence, and Ethical Accounting: Johnson and Swift on the Economy of Happiness," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 181-213.
Robert Cording, "Dr. Johnson: From the Western Isles," Sewanee Review, 94:4 (Oct.-Dec. 1986), 519-20. Poem.
John Craig, "Numeracy and Dr Johnson," The New Rambler, D:11 (1995-96), 47-54.
Thomas Crawford, "Boswell and the Rhetoric of Friendship," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 11-27.
André Crépin, "Samuel Johnson, Élisabeth Bourcier et la conscience chrétienne," in Ténebres et lumière: Essais sur la religion, la vie et la mort chrétiennes en Angleterre en hommage à la mémoire d'Elisabeth Bourcier (Paris: Didier, 1987), 7-10. In French.
Mary Jane Burbank Crotty, "Images of Women: Boswell's Scotland Tour with Johnson Revisited," Dissertation Abstracts International, 49:12 (June 1989), 3730A.
Robin N. Crouch, "Samuel Johnson on Drinking," Dionysos: The Literature and Addiction TriQuarterly, 5:2 (Fall 1993), 19-27.
E. Cruikshanks, "Samuel Johnson and Jacobitism: A Response to Donald Greene," TLS, 8 Sept. 1995, p. 17.
Marisol Cuevas Segarra, "Samuel Johnson's Rasselas and Voltaire's Candide: A Comparation [sic]," M.A. Thesis, Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1986 (not seen).
Paul K. Cuneo, "Another Odd Couple: Dr. Samuel Johnson and David Garrick," Biblio, 3:6 (June 1998), 22.
Thomas M. Curley, "Samuel Johnson and Sir Robert Chambers: A Creative Partnership in English Law," Indian Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 1:1 (Summer 1986), 1-16 (not seen).
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson's Last Word on Ossian: Ghostwriting for William Shaw," in Aberdeen and the Enlightenment, ed. Jennifer J. Carter (Aberdeen: Aberdeen Univ. Press, 1987), pp. 375-431.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson's Tour of Scotland and the Idea of Great Britain," British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 12 (1989), 135-44.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson and Burke: Constitutional Evolution versus Political Revolution," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 263 (1989), 265-68.
Thomas M. Curley, "Samuel Johnson and India," in Re-Viewing Samuel Johnson, ed. Nalini Jain (Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1991), pp. 9-29.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson and America," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 31-74.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson No Jacobite; or, Treason Not Yet Unmasked," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 137-62.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson No Jacobite; or, Treason Not Yet Unmasked: Part II, A Quotable Rejoinder from A to C," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 127-31.
M. A. Curr, "Anchoring the Imagination: A Study of Dr Johnson's Latin Poetry," Index to Theses, 44:4 (1995), 1436. University of London.
Leopold Damrosch, Jr., Fictions of Reality in the Age of Hume and Johnson (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1989). Pp. ix + 262. Reviews:
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 43 (1992), 274-75.
Leopold Damrosch, Jr., ed., Major Authors on CD-ROM: Samuel Johnson and James Boswell (Woodbridge, Conn.: Primary Source Media, 1997). Complete works of Johnson; near-complete works of Boswell. Reviews:
Cheryl LaGuardia, Library Journal, 123:20 (Dec. 1998), 168.
Stephen C. Danckert, ed., The Quotable Johnson: A Topical Compilation of His Wit and Moral Wisdom (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1992). Pp. 148. With a foreword by Joseph Sobran.
Joel Allan Dando, "The Poet as Critic: Byron in His Letters and Journals: Case Studies of Shakespeare and Johnson," Dissertation Abstracts International, 46:7 (Jan. 1986), 1947A.
Marlies K. Danziger, "Self-Restraint and Self-Display in the Authorial Comments in The Life of Johnson," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 162-73.
Robertson Davies, Why I Do Not Intend to Write an Autobiography (Toronto: Harbourfront Reading Series, 1993). Pp. 15. 500 copies. Fiction based on Johnson.
Ross Davies, "Bless You, Dr. Johnson," Connoisseur, 214 (Sept. 1984), 36.
Bertram Hylton Davis, Thomas Percy: A Scholar-Cleric in the Age of Johnson (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1989). Pp. xi + 361.
Matthew M. Davis, "'The Most Fatal of All Faults': Samuel Johnson on Prior's Solomon and the Need for Variety," Papers on Language & Literature, 33:4 (Fall 1997), 422-37.
Philip Davis, In Mind of Johnson: A Study of Johnson the Rambler (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1989). Pp. 318. Reviews:
Isobel Grundy, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 444-46;
Charles A. Knight, JEGP, 90:2 (1991), 243-45;
P. D. McGlynn, Choice, 27:2 (Oct. 1989), 798;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 48:3-49:2 (Sept. 1988-June 1989), 21-22.
Philip Davis, "Extraordinarily Ordinary: The Life of Samuel Johnson," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 4-17.
Robert Adams Day, "Psalmanazar's 'Formosa' and the British Reader (Including Samuel Johnson)," in Exoticism in the Enlightenment, ed. G. S. Rousseau and Roy Porter (Manchester: Manchester Univ. Press, 1989), pp. 197-221.
Merrowyn Deacon, "Dr. Johnson and Music," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 2:1 (1998), 1-7.
Tim Dean, "Psychopoetics of Lexicography: Johnson with Lacan," Literature and Psychology, 37:4 (1991), 9-28.
Frank Delaney, A Walk to the Western Isles: After Boswell & Johnson (London: HarperCollins, 1993). Pp. xii + 308.
Lillian De La Torre, The Return of Dr. Sam. Johnson, Detector: As Told by James Boswell (New York: International Polygonics, 1985). Pp. 191. Fiction.
Lillian De La Torre, The Exploits of Dr. Sam Johnson, Detector: Told as if by James Boswell (New York: International Polygonics, 1987). Pp. 220. Fiction.
Lillian De La Torre, Dr. Sam Johnson, Detector (Charlotte Hall, Md.: Recorded Books, 1989). Sound recording of fiction on 5 cassettes.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., Johnson's Dictionary and the Language of Learning (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1986). Pp. xii + 303. Reviews:
N. F. Blake, Lore and Language, 7:1 (1988), 113-14;
Philip Mahone Griffith, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 453-55;
Isobel Grundy, Yearbook of English Studies, 18 (1988), 324-26;
Elizabeth Hedrick, "Reading Johnson's Dictionary," Annals of Scholarship, 7 (1990), 91-101;
James McLaverty, N&Q, 35:2 (1988), 239-41;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 462-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 3;
Albert Pailler, Etudes anglaises, 40:2 (April-June 1987), 216-17;
Murray G. H. Pittock, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 12 (1989), 111-12;
Allen Reddick, Modern Philology, 86:3 (1989), 312-16;
Pat Rogers, London Review of Books, 9:1 (1987), 13-14;
Robert Stack, Times Higher Education Supplement, 731 (1986), 15;
Keith Walker, TLS, 30 Jan. 1987, p. 123;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 39:153 (1988), 113-14.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "The Politics of Johnson's Dictionary," PMLA, 104:1 (Jan. 1989), 64-74.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Reading Revolution," Eighteenth-Century Life, 16:3 (Nov. 1992), 86-102.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Johnson's Dictionary and the 'Teutonick' Roots of the English Language," in Language and Civilization: A Concerted Profusion of Essays and Studies in Honor of Otto Hietsch, I & II, ed. Claudia Blank and Patrick Selim Huck (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1992), I, 20-36.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., The Life of Samuel Johnson: A Critical Biography (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993). Pp. xviii + 356. Reviews:
Kate Chisholm, Times Educational Supplement, 4015 (11 June 1993), S10;
Nicholas Hudson, Modern Philology, 93:2 (Nov. 1995), 263-67;
Allan Ingram, Yearbook of English Studies, 25 91995), 296-97 (with another work);
Paul J. Korshin, Modern Philology, 93:2 (Nov. 1995), 267-71;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 42:1 (March 1995), 98-99;
David Nokes, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 495-500;
Joseph Rosenblum, Library Journal, 118:5 (15 March 1993), 76-77;
Michael F. Suarez, "Uncommon Reader," Review of English Studies, 46 (Aug. 1995), 415-17;
J. O. Tate, National Review, 39 (27 Feb. 1987), p. 54;
J. W. M. Thompson, The Times, 15 July 1993, Features;
Keith Walker, TLS, 24 Sept. 1993, p. 26;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 49:196 (Nov. 1998), 519-21;
The Observer, 29 Jan. 1994, p. 20 (not seen).
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Latter-Day Humanists and the Pastness of the Past," Common Knowledge, 3 (1993), 67-76.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., Samuel Johnson and the Life of Reading (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1997). Pp. xviii + 270. Reviews:
Biblio, 3:7 (July 1998), 73;
James Gray, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 285-92;
T. G. Kass, Cithara, 37:2 (May 1998), 44-45;
Jack Lynch, Choice, 35:3 (Nov. 1997), 1365;
Michael F. Suarez, S.J., TLS, 5 Sept. 1997, p. 36;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 49:196 (Nov. 1998), 519-21.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Johnson's Dictionary," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 85-101.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., and Gwin J. Kolb, "The Preliminaries to Dr. Johnson's Dictionary: Authorial Revisions and the Establishment of the Texts," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 121-34.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., and Gwin J. Kolb, "Johnson's Dictionary and Dictionary Johnson," Yearbook of English Studies, 28 (1998), 19-43.
Ralph De Toledano, "Dr. Johnson Revisited: Samuel Johnson and the Evolution of Language," National Review, 43:12 (8 July 1991), 44. Comments on Redford's edition of the Letters.
Helen Elizabeth Deutsch, "'The Confines of Distinction': Horace, Alexander Pope, Samuel Johnson and the Making of the Literary Career," Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:9 (March 1991), 3080A-81A. University of California, Berkeley.
Helen Deutsch, "'The Name of an Author': Moral Economics in Johnson's Life of Savage," Modern Philology, 92 (Feb. 1995), 328-45.
Helen Deutsch, "Doctor Johnson's Autopsy, or Anecdotal Immortality," The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation, 40:2 (Summer 1999), 113-27.
Peter Jan De Voogd, "'The Great Object of Remark': Samuel Johnson and Laurence Sterne," Essays on English and American Literature and a Sheaf of Poems, ed. J. Bakker, J. A. Verleun, and J v. d. Vriesenaerde (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1987) [i.e., Costerus, vol. 63], pp. 65-74.
Gerard De Vries, "Pale Fire and The Life of Johnson: The Case of Hodge and Mystery Lodge," The Nabokovian, 26 (Spring 1991), 44-49.
Bernd Dietz, "Tenerife en las letras inglesas: Posibles antecedentes de un texto de Samuel Johnson," in Serta Gratulatoria in Honorem Juan Regulo, I: Filologia, ed. Ana Regulo Rodriguez and Maria Regulo Rodriguez (La Laguna: Univ. de La Laguna, 1985), pp. 223-30. In Spanish.
R. J. Dingley, "Johnson's 'Reply to Impromptu Verses by Baretti': A Clue to Dating," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec 1995), 468.
J. H. Dirckx, "The Death of Samuel Johnson: Was It Hastened by Digitalis Intoxication?" American Journal of Dermatopathology, 6:6 (Dec. 1984), 531-36.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Dr. Johnson and the Dissenters," Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library, 68:2 (Spring 1986), 373-409.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Some Unitarian Perceptions of Dr. Johnson," Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society, 19:3 (1989), 139-52.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Dr Johnson at Oxford, 1759," N&Q, 36:1 (March 1989), 66-68.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Dr. Johnson's Derbyshire Connections," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 30-42.
G. M. Ditchfield, "A Deathbed Anecdote of Dr. Johnson," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec. 1995), 468-69.
John Dixon, "Tempering Ambitions: The Cultural Project of Samuel Johnson's Moral Essays," Dissertation Abstracts International, 52:12 (June 1996), 4784A. Boston University.
John Converse Dixon, "Politicizing Samuel Johnson: The Moral Essays and the Question of Ideology," College Literature, 25:3 (Fall 1998), 67-90.
Peter Dixon, "Goldsmith and Johnson," The New Rambler, E:1 (1997-98), 50-57.
Francis Doherty, "Rape of the Lock: Stretching the Limits of Allusion," Anglia: Zeitschrift fur Englische Philologie, 111:3-4 (1993), 355-72.
Daniel E. Doll, "'Daughters of Earth and Sons of Heaven': Johnson on Swift on Language," Lamar Journal of the Humanities, 17:2 (Fall 1991), 23-39.
William Domnarski, "Samuel Johnson and the Law," The New Rambler, C:23 (1982), 2-10.
Ian Donaldson, "Samuel Johnson and the Art of Observation," ELH, 53:4 (Winter 1986), 779-99.
Ian Donaldson, The Death of the Author and the Lives of the Poet: The David Fleeman Memorial Lecture, 1994 (Melbourne: The Johnson Society of Australia, 1994 [i.e., 1995]).
Margaret Anne Doody, "The Law, the Page, and the Body of Women: Murder and Murderess in the Age of Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 126-60.
Hugh Douglas, "Highlanders and Heroines: Dr Johnson's Meeting with Flora Macdonald," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 15-20.
William C. Dowling, "Structure and Absence in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in Modern Essays on Eighteenth-Century Literature, ed. Leopold Damrosch, Jr. (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1988), pp. 355-78.
J. A. Downie, "Swift and Johnson: The Problems of the Life of Swift," The New Rambler, C:24 (1983), 26-27.
Paul M. Duke, "Players on Unbroken Spinets: Thomas Wolfe and James Boswell," The Thomas Wolfe Review, 16:2 (Fall 1992), 47-51.
R. D. Dunn, "Samuel Johnson's Prologue to A Word to the Wise and the Epilogue by 'A Friend,'" ELN, 25:3 (March 1988), 28-35.
Simon During, "Waiting for the Post: Some Relations between Modernity, Colonization, and Writing," ARIEL, 20:4 (Oct. 1989), 31-61.
Simon During, "Waiting for the Post: Some Relations between Modernity, Colonization, and Writing," in Past the Last Post: Theorizing Post-Colonialism and Post-Modernism, ed. Ian Adam and Helen Tiffin (Calgary: Univ. of Calgary Press, 1990), pp. 23-45.
Simon During, "Waiting for the Post: Some Relations between Modernity, Colonization and Writing," in History and Post-War Writing, ed. Theo D'haen and Hans Bertens (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1990), pp. 227-57.
John A. Dussinger, "Dr. Johnson's Solemn Response to Beneficence," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 57-69.
John A. Dussinger, "'The Solemn Magnificence of a Stupendous Ruin': Richard Savage, Poet Manqué," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 167-82.
John A. Dussinger, "Hester Piozzi, Italy, and the Johnsonian Aether," South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992), 46-58.
Robert Easting, "Johnson's Note on 'Aroint thee, witch!'" N&Q, 35:4 (Dec. 1988), 480-82.
Mary Hyde Eccles and Donald D. Eddy, eds., Dr Johnson & Mrs Thrale, the End of Their Long Friendship: Letters in the Hyde Collection (Somerville, N.J.: The Four Oaks Farm Library, 1992). Pp. 28. Contains "Unraveling the Fabric of Friendship" by Bruce Redford, "Provenance" by Mary Hyde Eccles, and facsimiles of four letters. For the annual dinner of The Johnsonians commemorating Johnson's two hundred eighty-third birthday at the Grolier Club in New York.
Donald D. Eddy, Sale Catalogues of the Libraries of Samuel Johnson, Hester Lynch Thrale (Mrs. Piozzi) and James Boswell (New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll Books, 1993). Pp. 328. Facsimiles. Reviews:
T. H. Howard Hill, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 88:1 (March 1994), 113-14.
D. D. Eddy and J. D. Fleeman, "A Preliminary Handlist of Books to which Dr. Samuel Johnson Subscribed," Studies in Bibliography, 46 (1993), 187-220. Reviews:
Kevin Berland, East-Central Intelligencer, n.s. 8:3 (Sept. 1994), 9;
Anne McDermott, Review of English Studies, 46:181 (Feb. 1995), 137;
Paul Tankard, The Bulletin of the Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand, 18:1 (1994), 56-58.
William Edinger, Johnson and Detailed Representation: The Significance of the Classical Sources (Victoria: Univ. of Victoria, 1997). Pp. 105. ELS Monograph Series no. 72.
William Edinger, "Eighteenth-Century Language Theory and Imlac's Tulip," Hellas, 7:2 (1992), 171-91.
David Edward, "Johnson, Boswell and the Conflict of Loyalties," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1995), 1-17.
Gavin Edwards, "Why Are Human Wishes Vain? On Reading Samuel Johnson's The Vanity of Human Wishes," Proceedings of the English Association of the North, 2 (1986), 52-62.
Gavin Edwards, "The Illegitimation of Richard Savage," Sydney Studies in English, 17 (1991-92), 67-74.
Owen Dudley Edwards, "Rambling Sam: The Dr. Johnson Show, Southside Courtyard, Theatre," The Scotsman, 17 Aug. 1997, p. FEST9. Brief extracts from Rambling Sam.
Margaret Eliot and P. G. Suarez, Dr. Johnson Said... (London: Privately printed for the Trustees of Dr. Johnson's House by Thomas Harmsworth, 1988). Pp. ???.
Helen Yvonne Elliott, "Johnson, Nature, and Women: The Early Years," Dissertation Abstracts International, 55:9 (March 1995), 2840A. University of North Carolina, Greensboro.
David Ellis, "Biography and Friendship: Johnson's Life of Savage," in Imitating Art: Essays in Biography, ed. David Ellis (London: Pluto Press, 1993), pp. 19-35.
Ben Elton and Richard Curtis, "Ink and Incapability," episode 2 of Blackadder the Third. Produced by John Lloyd; directed by Mandie Fletcher; written by Ben Elton and Richard Curtis. The Prince Regent (Hugh Laurie) wants to become the patron of Johnson (Robbie Coltrane) for his Dictionary. After Baldrick (Tony Robinson) accidentally burns the sole manuscript, Blackadder (Rowan Atkinson) has to recreate the entire thing from scratch. Also includes appearances by a roguish group of poets, including Coleridge (Jim Sweeney), Shelley (Lee Cornes), and Byron (Steve Steen).
Ann Engar, "Johnson in a Western Civilization Course," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 64-70.
[Add to item 10/6:380] James Engell, ed., Johnson and His Age (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, 1984). Reviews:
Isobel Grundy, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 10 (1987), 103-105;
Anne McDermott, Critical Quarterly, 27:4 (1985), 86-88;
Pat Rogers, Prose Studies, 10:1 (1987), 111-12.
Mark English, "Samuel Johnson: A Portrait in OED-Antedatings," N&Q, 40:3 (Sept. 1993), 331-34.
William H. Epstein, Recognizing Biography (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1987), chapter 4 ("Patronizing the Biographical Subject: Johnson's Life of Savage"), pp. 52-70; chapter 6 ("Recognizing the Biographer: Boswell's Life of Johnson"), pp. 90-137.
William H. Epstein, "Professing the Eighteenth Century," Profession (1985), pp. 10-15. On scholarly publishing, with Johnson and Boswell as examples.
Ruthi Roth Erdman, "Rich Man, Poor Man, Beggar Man Thief: Samuel Johnson and the Economics of Poverty," M.A. Thesis, Central Washington University, 1991 (not seen).
Howard Erskine-Hill, "The Poet and Affairs of State in Johnson's Lives of the Poets," Man and Nature/ L'Homme et la nature, 6 (1987), 93-113.
Howard Erskine-Hill, "The Political Character of Samuel Johnson: The Lives of the Poets and a Further Report on The Vanity of Human Wishes," in The Jacobite Challenge, ed. Eveline Cruickshanks and Jeremy Black (Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers, 1988), pp. 161-76.
Howard Erskine-Hill, "Johnson the Jacobite? A Response to the New Introduction to Donald Greene's The Politics of Samuel Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 3-26.
Howard Erskine-Hill, Poetry of Opposition and Revolution, Dryden to Wordsworth (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1996), chapter 4 ("The Decision of Samuel Johnson"), pp. 111-38; chapter 5 ("The Vanity of Human Wishes in Context"), pp. 139-66. Reviews:
Jayne Elizabeth Lewis, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 329-37.
Howard Erskine-Hill, "A Kind of Liking for Jacobitism," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 3-13.
Timothy Erwin, "Johnson's Life of Savage and Lockean Psychology," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 18 (1988), 199-212.
Timothy Erwin, "Voltaire and Johnson Again: The Life of Savage and the Sertorius Letter (1744)," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 284 (1991), 211-23.
Timothy Erwin, "On Teaching Johnson and Lockean Empiricism," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 35-41.
Hideichi Eto, "Samuel Johnson and the Gentleman's Magazine," Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku kenkyu kiyo, 20 (1990), 109. In Japanese.
Scott David Evans, "Samuel Johnson's 'General Nature' in Its Context," Dissertation Abstracts International, 58:11 (1997), A4278. Arizona State University.
David Fairer, "Thomas Warton and his Friends," The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 36-37.
David Fairer, "Dr. Johnson's Gift to Trinity College Library and the Dating of Letter 318," The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 47-49.
Faridoun Farrokh, "The Vanity of Human Wishes: Samuel Johnson and the Discovery of the Poetic Self," in Selected Essays from the International Conference on Word and World of Discovery, ed. Gerald Garmon (Carrollton, GA: Department of English, West Georgia College, 1992), pp. 50-60.
Stuart Feder, "Transference Attended the Birth of the Modern Biography," American Imago, 54:4 (Winter 1997), 399-415. On Johnson's Life of Savage.
Jan Fergus, "The Provincial Buyers of Johnson's Dictionary and its Alternatives," The New Rambler, D:6 (1990-91), 3-5.
Gillian Ferguson, "Boswell the Philanderer Rides Again," The Sunday Times, 8 Aug. 1993 (not seen). Interview with John Sessions on BBC2's Tour of the Western Isles.
W. Ferguson, "Samuel Johnson's Views on Scottish Gaelic Culture," Scottish Historical Review, 77 (Oct. 1998), 183-98.
Bonita Mae Ferrero, "Reconstructing the Canon: Samuel Johnson and the Universal Visiter," Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:8 (Feb. 1991), 2751A. University of Connecticut.
Bonnie Ferrero, "Samuel Johnson and Arthur Murphy: Curious Intersections and Deliberate Divergence," ELN, 28:3 (March 1991), 18-24.
Bonnie Ferrero, "Johnson, Murphy, and Macbeth," Review of English Studies, 42:166 (May 1991), 228-32.
Bonnie Ferrero, Reconstructing the Canon: Samuel Johnson and the Universal Visiter (New York: Peter Lang, 1993). Pp. 146.
Bonnie Ferrero, "Samuel Johnson, Richard Rolt, and the Universal Visiter," Review of English Studies, 44:174 (May 1993), 176-86.
Claude Fierobe, "Rasselas: Le Decor voile de l'impossible utopie," La Licorne, 10 (1986), 45-54. In French.
G. J. Finch, "Reason, Imagination and Will in Rasselas and The Vanity of Human Wishes," English: The Journal of the English Association, 38:162 (Autumn 1989), 195-209.
Stephen Fix, "The Contexts and Motives of Johnson's Life of Milton," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 107-32.
Stephen Fix, "Teaching Johnson's Critical Writing," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 128-34.
Stephen Fix, "Prayer, Poetry, and Paradise Lost: Samuel Johnson as Reader of Milton's Christian Epic," in Seeing into the Life of Things: Essays on Literature and Religious Experience, ed. John L. Mahoney (New York: Fordham Univ. Press, 1998), pp. 126-51.
Richard F. Fleck, "Samuel Johnson's Rasselas: A Perspective on Islam," Weber Studies, 10:1 (Winter 1993), 50-57.
[Add to item 1/3:32] J. D. Fleeman, ed., A Preliminary Handlist of Copies of Books Associated with Dr. Samuel Johnson (Oxford: Oxford Bibliographic Society, 1984). Reviews:
O M Brack, Jr., The Library, 9:1 (1987);
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 48-49.
J. D. Fleeman, "Dr. Johnson and 'Miss Fordice,'" N&Q, 33 (March 1986), 59-60.
David Fleeman, "Johnson's Dictionary (1755)," Trivium, 22 (Summer 1987), 83-88.
J. D. Fleeman, "Memorabilia," N&Q, 36:1 (March 1989), 1-5.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson and Boswell in Scotland," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1989-90), 51-72.
J. D. Fleeman, "Uttoxeter Commemorative Address," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1989-90), 77-80.
J. D. Fleeman, The Genesis of Johnson's Dictionary (Harlow, Essex, England: Longman, 1990). Part of the Longman facsimile edition of Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson in the Schoolroom: George Fulton's Miniature Dictionary (1821)," in An Index of Civilisation: Studies of Printing and Publishing History in Honour of Keith Maslen, ed. Harvey Ross, Wallace Kirsop, and B. J. McMullin (Clayton, Victoria, Australia: Center for Bibliographical and Textual Studies, Monash Univ., 1993), pp. 163-71.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson's Shakespeare (1765): The Progress of a Subscription," in Writers, Books, and Trade, ed. O M Brack, Jr. (New York: AMS Press, 1994), pp. 355-65.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson's Secret," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 147-50.
J. D. Fleeman, "Michael Johnson, the 'Lichfield Librarian,'" Publishing History, 39 (1996), 23-44.
Susan Adele Fleming, "Mary Shelley and Samuel Johnson: Social and Ethical Implications of the Individual's Pursuit of Perfection," M.A. Thesis, Auburn University, 1990 (not seen).
William Fletcher, "Dr Johnson and the Seven Provinces," The New Rambler D:2 (1986-87), 27-36. On Johnson and Dutch languages, culture, and history.
Timothy Jon Florschuetz, "An Examination of the Nile River in Samuel Johnson's The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia," M.A. Thesis, Arizona State University, 1991 (not seen).
Robert Folkenflik, "Rasselas and the Closed Field," Huntington Library Quarterly, 57 (1994), 337-52.
Robert Folkenflik, "Samuel Johnson," in Encyclopædia Britannica, 15th ed. (Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 1995). Also available through Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Robert Folkenflik, "Johnson's Politics," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 102-13.
Alexander Malcolm Forbes, "The Measure and the Choice: Empiricism and Revelation in Johnson's 'Vanity of Human Wishes,' 'Rambler,' and 'Rasselas,'" Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:4 (Oct. 1990), 1238A.
Alexander M. Forbes, "Johnson, Blackstone, and the Tradition of Natural Law," Mosaic, 27:4 (Dec. 1994), 81-98.
Alexander M. Forbes, "Ultimate Reality and Ethical Meaning: Theological Utilitarianism in Eighteenth-Century England," Ultimate Reality and Meaning, 18:2 (1995), 119-38.
Helen Forsyth, "Samuel Johnson," The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 27. Poem.
Helen Forsyth, "Samuel Johnson," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), p. vii. Sonnet on Johnson, reprinted from above.
Ra Foxton, "A Johnsonian Heritage: The Hussey Copy of Boswell's Life," Eighteenth-Century News (Melbourne), 24 (1985), 9-17.
Roslyn Reso Foy, "Johnson's Rasselas: Women in the 'Stream of Life,'" ELN, 32:1 (Sept. 1994), 39-53.
Peter France, "Western Civilization and Its Mountain Frontiers," History of European Ideas, 6:3 (1985), 297-310.
Michael Fraser, "Chaucer, Johnson, and Shakespeare on CD-ROM," Computers & Texts, 12 (July 1996), 21-25. Review essay on Anne McDermott's edition of the Dictionary on CD-ROM.
Russell Fraser, "What is Augustan Poetry?" Sewanee Review, 98:4 (Fall 1990), 620-85.
Ian Frazier, "Boswell's Life of Don Johnson," The New Yorker, 62 (15 Sept. 1986), 32. Parody of Boswell's Life about television actor Don Johnson.
Ronald H. Fritze, "The Oxford English Dictionary: A Brief History," Reference Services Review, 17:3 (1989), 61-70.
Raymond-Jean Frontain, "Johnson in the British Literature Survey Course," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 56-63.
Tetsu Fujii, "James Boswell Reconstructed from Various Editions of the Encyclopaedia Britannica," The Bulletin of Central Research Institute: Fukuoka University, 116 (1989), 29-60. In Japanese.
Tetsu Fujii, "Johnson's 'Roscommon' in the 18th Century," Sophia English Studies, 16 (1991), 3-18.
Tetsu Fujii, "An Essay concerning How Dr. Johnson's 'Life of Collins' Exerted Influence in the 18th Century," Fukuoka University Review of Literature & Humanities, 24 (1993), 1233-63. In Japanese.
Tetsu Fujii, "How Samuel Johnson Has Been Described in Successive Editions of the Encyclopaedia Britannica," Studies in Eighteenth-Century English Literature, ed. The Johnson Society of Japan (Tokyo: Yusho-Do, 1996), 71-91.
Tetsu Fujii, "A List of Johnson and Boswell Studies in Japan: Those Published in Book Form from 1871 to 1997," The Bulletin of Central Research Institute of Fukuoka University, 208 (1998), 39-122. In Japanese.
Dwight C. Gabbard, "The Drudgery of Wit -- Samuel Johnson as an Engineer of Language," M.A. Thesis, San Francisco State University, 1993 (not seen).
Jose Angel Garcia Landa, "'The Enthusiastick Fit': The Function and Fate of the Poet in Johnson's Rasselas," Cuadernos de investigacion filologica, 17:1-2 (1991), 103-26 (not seen).
Howard Gaskill, "What Did James MacPherson Really Leave on Display at His Publisher's Shop in 1762?" Scottish Gaelic Studies, 16 (Winter 1990), 67-89.
Genevieve Gebhart, "'A Violent Passion': Pugnacity and the Prizefighting Phenomenon in Johnson's England -- A Montage," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 3 (1999), 37-57.
Mark Gellis, "Burke, Campbell, Johnson, and Priestley: A Rhetorical Analysis of Four British Pamphlets of the American Revolution," Dissertation Abstracts International, 54:7 (1993), 2555A. Purdue University.
Christine Gerrard, The Patriot Opposition to Walpole: Politics, Poetry, and National Myth, 1725-1742 (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1995), chapter 8 ("Jacobites and Patriots: Johnson and Savage").
R. B. Gill, "The Enlightened Occultist: Beckford's Presence in Vathek," in Vathek and the Escape from Time: Bicentenary Revaluations, ed. Kenneth W. Graham (New York: AMS, 1990), pp. 131-43.
Thomas B. Gilmore, "Implicit Criticism of Thomson's Seasons in Johnson's Dictionary," Modern Philology, 86:3 (Feb. 1989), 265-73.
John Glendening, "Young Fanny Burney and the Mentor," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 281-312.
John Glendening, "Northern Exposures: English Literary Tours of Scotland, 1720-1820," Dissertation Abstracts International, 53 (1993), 3221A.
Christina Eleanor Godlewski, "'It Matters Not How a Man Dies, but How He Lives': Samuel Johnson and the Rhetoric of Consolation," M.A. Thesis, University of Maryland at College Park, 1992 (not seen).
Joel J. Gold, "The Failure of Johnson's Irene: Death by Antithesis," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 201-14.
Joel J. Gold, "Literate Conversation, Scholarship, and 'Clubbability': High Spots and Low among Johnsonians of the Midwest," Chronicle of Higher Education, 34:46 (27 July 1988), 82-83.
Michael Goldberg, "'Demigods and Philistines': Macaulay and Carlyle -- A Study in Contrasts," Studies in Scottish Literature, 24 (1989), 116-28.
Richard L. Golden, "Medicine & Numismatics: Samuel Johnson and the Golden Angel," The Numismatist, 109:4 (1 April 1996), 411.
James O. Goldsborough, "Summertime and a Chance to Visit One of the World's Great Men of Letters," The San Diego Union-Tribune, 8 July 1999, p. B13.
Allegra S. Goodman, "Virtuous Philosophers and Chameleon Poet: The Shakespeare of Samuel Johnson and John Keats," Dissertation Abstracts International, 58:7 (1997), A2667. Stanford University.
Stephen Goodwin, "Dr. Johnson's Gem in Peril," The Independent, 4 Nov. 1996, p. 9. Newhailes House, praised by Johnson as "the most learned drawing-room in Europe," threatened with destruction.
Scott Paul Gordon, "A Note on Reynolds's 'The Infant Johnson,'" Johnsonian News Letter, 47:3-4 (Sept.-Dec. 1988), 16.
Henry Gordon-Clark, "Johnson and Savage," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 2 (1997), 1-5.
Henry Gordon-Clark, "Was Johnson a Thief?: Plagiarism in the Account of the Life of Richard Savage," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 3 (1999), 59-67.
James Gray, "Auctor et Auctoritas: Dr. Johnson's Views on the Authority of Authorship," English Studies in Canada, 12:3 (Sept. 1986), 269-84.
James Gray, "'A Native of the Rocks': Johnson's Handling of the Theme of Love," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 106-22.
James Gray, "Johnson's Portraits of Charles XII of Sweden," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 70-84.
James Gray, "'The Athenian Blockheads': New Light on Johnson's Oxford," The New Rambler, D:3 (1987-88), 30-45.
James Gray, "Dr Johnson and the Theatre," The New Rambler, D:4 (1988-89), 37-38.
James Gray, "Johnson, Cromwell, and the Jacobite Cause," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 90-153.
James Gray, "Some Thoughts on the Eighteenth Century Response to Miracles," The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 4-5.
James Gray and T. J. Murray, "Dr. Johnson and Dr. James," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 213-46.
Stephen Gray, "Johnson's Use of Some African Myths in Rasselas," Standpunte, 38:2 (April 1985), 16-23.
Jonathon Green, "Samuel Johnson: The Pivotal Moment," in Chasing the Sun: Dictionary Makers and the Dictionaries They Made (New York: Henry Holt, 1996), pp. 251-83.
Julien Green, Suite anglaise (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1988). Pp. 125. In French.
Mary Elizabeth Green, "Defoe and Johnson in Scotland," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 20 (1990), 303-15.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson," in The Craft of Literary Biography, ed. Jeffrey Meyers (New York: Schocken Books, 1985), pp. 9-32.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson, Psychobiographer: The Life of Richard Savage," in The Biographer's Art: New Essays, ed. Jeffrey Meyers (London: Macmillan, 1987), 11-30.
[Add to item 2:44] Donald Greene, The Oxford Authors: Samuel Johnson (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1984). Reviews:
Greg Clingham, "Johnson in Memoriam," The Cambridge Quarterly, 15 (1986), 77-84;
Thomas D'Evelyn, Christian Science Monitor, 5 Dec. 1984, p. 35;
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 50-52;
Jenny Mezciems, Review of English Studies, 39:154 (1988), 297-99;
Albert Pailler, Etudes anglaises, 39:2 (April-June 1986), 217-18;
Samuel H. Woods, Jr., Yearbook of English Studies, 18 (1988), 327-29.
Donald Greene, "Johnsonian Punctuation," Johnsonian News Letter, 47:3-4 (Sept.-Dec. 1988), 7-9. On the punctuation of the letter to Chesterfield.
Donald Greene, Samuel Johnson, updated ed. (Boston: Twayne, 1989). Pp. xvii + 206.
Donald Greene, The Politics of Samuel Johnson, 2nd ed. (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1990). Pp. lxxix + 356. Reviews:
Alistair Boag, TLS, 24-30 Aug. 1990, p. 905;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 38:4 (Dec. 1991), 545-46;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 49:3-50:2 (Sept. 1989-June 1990), 21-22;
Patrick O'Flaherty, "Samuel Johnson's Politics: Some Points of Disagreement," Dalhousie Review, 72:3 (Fall 1992), 382-98;
Robert Ziegler, Papers on Language & Literature, 28 (Fall 1992), 457-75.
Donald Greene, "Housman and Johnson," Johnsonian News Letter, 48:3-49:2 (Sept. 1988-June 1989), 24-26.
Donald Greene, "The Logia of Samuel Johnson and the Quest for the Historical Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 1-33.
Donald Greene, "Johnson's Doctorate," TLS, 14-20 Sept. 1990, p. 974. See also items 574a and 892a.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson," TLS, 23 Aug. 1991, p. 13. On the authenticity of Johnson's "Opera: an Exotick and Irrational Entertainment." See also item 755a.
Donald Greene, "'A Secret Far Dearer to Him than His Life': Johnson's 'Vile Melancholy' Reconsidered," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 1-40.
Donald Greene, "Johnson's 'Saintdom': A Note," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1992), 43-44.
Donald Greene, "The Myth of Johnson's Misogyny: Some Addenda," South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992), 6-17.
Donald Greene, "Johnson on Columbus," Johnsonian News Letter, 52:2-53:2 (June 1992-June 1993), 23-25.
Donald Greene, "The World's Worst Biography," The American Scholar, 62:3 (Summer 1993), 365-82.
Donald Greene, "Progress towards Where? Conservation of What?" The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 88-102. Response to Nagashima, "Progressive or Conservative? Two Trends in Johnson Studies."
Donald Greene, "Catholicism in Johnson's Lobo," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1994), 12-18.
Donald Greene, "Was Dr Johnson Really a Jacobite?" TLS, 18 Aug. 1995, pp. 13-14.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson and Jacobitism," TLS, 13 Oct. 1995, p. 19.
Donald Greene, "Johnson: The Jacobite Legend Exhumed: A Rejoinder to Howard Erskine-Hill and J. C. D. Clark," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 57-136.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson's 'Body Language': A New Perspective," in Enlightened Groves: Essays in Honour of Professor Zenzo Suzuki, ed. Eiichi Hara, Hiroshi Ozawa, and Peter Robinson (Tokyo: Shohakusha, 1996), pp. 240-62.
Donald Greene, "Jonathan Clark and the Abominable Cultural Mind-Set," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 71-88.
Donald Greene, "Dr Johnson's Charity," TLS, 2 May 1997, p. 17.
Donald Greene, "'Beyond Probability': A Boswellian Act of Faith," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 9 (1998), 47-80. A response to Burke, "Boswell and the Text of Johnson's Logia."
Donald Greene and John A. Vance, Chief Glories: The Life of Samuel Johnson, on Proper Study: The Life of Alexander Pope; and Chief Glories: The Life of Samuel Johnson (Research Triangle Park, N.C.: National Humanities Center, 1985). Audio disk: interviews with Greene and Vance on side B. Side A features Maynard Mack on Pope (not seen).
Donald Greene and John A. Vance, A Bibliography of Johnsonian Studies, 1970-1985 (Victoria: Univ. of Victoria, 1987). Pp. vi + 116. Reviews:
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, D:2 (1986-87), 25-27;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 47:3-4 (Sept.-Dec. 1988), 1.
Dustin Griffin, "Johnson's Lives of the Poets and the Patronage System," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 1-33.
Dustin Griffin, Literary Patronage in England, 1650-1800 (New York: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996), chapter 9, pp. 220-45.
Dustin Griffin, "Regulated Loyalty: Jacobitism and Johnson's Lives of the Poets," ELH, 64:4 (Winter 1997), 1007-27.
Robert John Griffin, "Samuel Johnson and the Act of Reflection," Dissertation Abstracts International, 46:11 (May 1986), 3358A.
Robert J. Griffin, "Reflection as Criterion in The Lives of the Poets," Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, ed. Harold Bloom (New York: Chelsea, 1986), pp. 239-62.
Philip Mahone Griffith, "Samuel Johnson and King Charles the Martyr: Veneration in the Dictionary," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 235-61.
Philip Mahone Griffith, "Boswell's Johnson and the Stephens (Leslie Stephen and Virginia Woolf)," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 151-64.
Gloria Sybil Gross, "Johnson and the Uses of Enchantment," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 299-311.
Gloria Sybil Gross, "'A Child Is Being Beaten': Suggestions toward a Psychoanalytical Reading of Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 181-218.
Gloria Gross, "Mentoring Jane Austen: Reflections on 'My Dear Dr. Johnson,'" Persuasions: Journal of the Jane Austen Society of North America, 11 (16 Dec. 1989), 53-60.
Gloria Sybil Gross, This Invisible Riot of the Mind: Samuel Johnson's Psychological Theory (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1992). Pp. x + 198. Reviews:
O M Brack, Jr., Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 49:2 (1995), 169-74 (with other works);
G. P. Brooks, Isis, 85:2 (June 1994), 339-40;
J. R. Griffin, Choice, 30:3 (Nov. 1992), 464;
Isobel Grundy, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 27:1 (1993), 174-75;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 43:2 (June 1996), 225;
Anne McDermott, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 17:2 (Autumn 1994), 219-20;
Catherine N. Parke, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 391-93;
Joel Weinsheimer, JEGP, 92:4 (1993), 556-58.
Gloria Sybil Gross, "Reading Johnson Psychoanalytically," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 49-55.
Isobel Grundy, ed., Samuel Johnson: New Critical Essays (London: Vision; New York: Barnes & Noble, 1984). Pp. 208. Reviews:
James Gray, Dalhousie Review, 65:2 (1985), 300-307;
J. H. Leicester, The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 55-57;
Lawrence Lipking, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21 (Fall 1987), 109-13;
Albert Pailler, Etudes anglaises, 39:2 (April-June 1986), 218;
John A. Vance, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 492-98;
David Wheeler, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 9:2 (1986), 254-56;
Samuel H. Woods, Jr., Yearbook of English Studies, 18 (1988), 326-27.
Isobel Grundy, "The Stability of Truth," The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 35-44.
Isobel Grundy, Samuel Johnson and the Scale of Greatness (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1986). Pp. 278. Reviews:
Paul Alkon, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 437-42;
James T. Boulton, N&Q, 35:1 (1988), 97-98;
John Burke, South Atlantic Review, 53:1 (Jan. 1988), 128-30;
Greg Clingham, Review of English Studies, 38 (1987), 394-96;
Leopold Damrosch, Jr., MLR, 83:4 (1988), 962-64;
Lawrence Lipking, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21 (Fall 1987), 109-13;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 462-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 2-3;
David Nokes, Times Higher Education Supplement, 713 (1986), 19;
Laura Payne, CEA Critic, 51:1 (1988), 142-46;
Rachel Trickett, The New Rambler, D:2 (1986-87), 24-25.
Isobel Grundy, "Samuel Johnson as Patron of Women," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 59-77.
Isobel Grundy, "Swift and Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 154-80.
Isobel Grundy, "Celebrare domestica facta: Johnson and Home Life," The New Rambler, D:6 (1990-91), 6-14.
Isobel Grundy, "Restoration and Eighteenth Century (1660-1780)," in An Outline of English Literature, ed. Pat Rogers (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1992), pp. 200-49.
Isobel Grundy, "A Note on Johnson's Charles, Shakespeare's Caesar," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 51.
Isobel Grundy, "'Over Him We Hang Vibrating': Uncertainty in the Life of Johnson," in Boswell: Citizen of the World, Man of Letters, ed. Irma S. Lustig (Lexington, KY: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1995), pp. 184-202.
Isobel Grundy, "Johnson's Bookman," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 393-404. Review essay on Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), ed. David L. Vander Meulen.
Peter Gruner, "Flocking to the Shrine of Dr Johnson, the Great Debunker," Evening Standard, 20 Nov. 1992, p. 16.
John Guillory, "The English Common Place: Lineages of the Topographical Genre," Critical Quarterly, 33:4 (Winter 1991), 3-27.
David Gunto, "Kicking the Emperor: Some Problems of Restoration Parallel History," 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era, 3 (1997), 109-27.
John T. Guthrie, "Research: An Uncloistered Curriculum," Journal of Reading, 24:2 (1980), 188-89. On using Boswell's Life in the reading classroom.
Jean H. Hagstrum, "Samuel Johnson among the Deconstructionists," The Georgia Review, 39:3 (Fall 1985), 537-47.
Jean H. Hagstrum, "Samuel Johnson among the Deconstructionists," in Re-Viewing Samuel Johnson, ed. Nalini Jain (Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1991), pp. 112-24.
Bonnie Hain and Carole McAllister, "James Boswell's Ms. Perceptions and Samuel Johnson's Ms. Placed Friends," South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992), 59-70.
William H. Halewood, "The Majesty of The Vanity of Human Wishes," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 256-68.
Edward M. Hallowell, M.D., "The Example of Samuel Johnson," in Worry: Controlling It and Using It Wisely (New York: Pantheon, 1997), 216-38.
Alan Hamilton, "Dr Johnson's City of Philosophers Still Satisfies the Inquisitive Walker," The Times, 5 Aug. 1995, Home news.
Ian Hamilton, Keepers of the Flame: Literary Estates and the Rise of Biography (Pimlico, 1994). Pp. viii + 344.
Michael Hancher, "Bailey and After: Illustrating Meaning," Word and Image, 8:1 (1992), 1-20.
Sally N. Hand, "The 'Finest Bit of Blue': Samuel Johnson and the Bluestocking Assemblies," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 6-18.
Brian Joseph Hanley, "Samuel Johnson's Military Writings," M.A. Thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1992 (not seen).
Brian Hanley, "Colonel Gimbel and the Literary Anvil: or Why Dr Johnson's Letters Belong to the U.S. Airforce Academy's Aeronautical Collection," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 83-87.
Brian Hanley, "Johnson's Contemporary Reputation," The New Rambler, D:11 (1995-96), 56-62.
Brian Hanley, "The Prevailing Tone of Johnson's Military Commentary," The New Rambler, D:12 (1996-97), 39-45.
John Hardy, "Samuel Johnson's Literary Criticism," Essays and Studies, 39 (1986), 62-77.
John Hardy, "Samuel Johnson," in Dryden to Johnson, ed. Roger Lonsdale (New York: Bedrick, 1987), pp. 279-311.
John Hardy, "Line 361 of The Vanity of Human Wishes," N&Q, 39:4 (Dec. 1992), 480-81.
David Harley, "Johnson and Neo-Hippocratic Medicine," The New Rambler, D:12 (1996-97), 32-39.
Richard L. Harp, ed. Dr. Johnson's Critical Vocabulary: A Selection from His "Dictionary" (Lanham, MD: Univ. Press of America, 1986). Pp. xlv + 268. "The purpose of this book ... is to put into general circulation those portions of the Dictionary that persons interested in literature and writing would find of greatest value." Reviews:
Lionel Basney, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21 (Fall 1987), 113-17;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 49:3-50:2 (Sept. 1989-June 1990), 22-23;
James Rettig, American Reference Books Annual, 19 (1988), 1074.
Richard Harries, "Sermon Preached in Lichfield Cathedral Sunday, 24th September, 1989," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1989), 16-18.
Jocelyn Harris, "Samuel Johnson, Samuel Richardson, and the Dial-Plate," British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 9:2 (Autumn 1986), 157-63.
Jeffrey Peter Hart, "Does the University Have a Future?" National Review, 40 (1 April 1988), 32. Imagined conversation between Samuel Johnson and William James.
Kevin Hart, "Economic Acts: Johnson in Scotland," Eighteenth-Century Life, 16:1 (Feb. 1992), 94-110.
Kevin Hart, "Johnson as Monument," The Critical Review, 34 (1994), 33-49.
Kevin Hart, Samuel Johnson and the Culture of Property (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1999). Pp. 244.
Franz Josef Hausmann, "Samuel Johnson (1709-1784): Bicentenaire de sa mort," Lexicographica, 1 (1985), 239-42. In French.
Emma Hawari, "Samuel Johnson and Lessing's Lexicographical Work," New German Studies, 13:3 (Autumn 1985), 185-95.
E. E. E. Hawari, "Johnson and Lessing: A Study of Johnson's Critical Theory and Practice," Index to Theses, 43:2 (1994), 442.
Emma Hawari, Johnson's and Lessing's Dramatic Critical Theories and Practice with a Consideration of Lessing's Affinities with Johnson (Bern: P. Lang, 1991). Pp. 293. Reviews:
G. F. Parker,
Cambridge Quarterly, 19:3 (1990), 243-54.
Clement Hawes, "Johnson and Imperialism," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 114-26.
William Anthony Hay, "Reason, Truth, and Community in Samuel Johnson's Later Work," Consortium on Revolutionary Europe: Selected Papers, 4 (1997), pp. 53-60 (not seen).
Ernest Heberden, "Dr. Heberden and Dr. Johnson," The New Rambler, D:3 (1987-88), 9-21.
Elizabeth Hedrick, "Locke's Theory of Language and Johnson's Dictionary," Eighteenth-Century Studies, 20:4 (Summer 1987), 422-44.
Elizabeth Hedrick, "Fixing the Language: Johnson, Chesterfield, and The Plan of a Dictionary," ELH, 55:2 (Summer 1988), 421-42.
Donna Heiland, "Remembering the Hero in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 194-206.
Eithne Henson, "The Fictions of Romantick Chivalry": Samuel Johnson and Romance (Rutherford, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press, 1992). Pp. 255. Reviews:
Paul Dean, English Studies, 74:6 (Dec. 1993), 549-58;
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 48-51 (with another work);
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 41:3 (Sept. 1994), 396-97;
D. L. Patey, Choice, 30:6 (Feb. 1993), 960.
Eithne Henson, "Johnson and the Condition of Women," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 67-84.
Eithne Henson, "Lost for Words," The Independent, 27 June 1999, p. 31. Brief letter to the Editor, challenging A. N. Wilson's claim that Johnson dismissed monastic retirement.
Neil Hertz, "Dr. Johnson's Forgetfulness, Descartes' Piece of Wax," Eighteenth-Century Life, 16:3 (Nov. 1992), 167-81.
Regina Hewitt, "Time in Rasselas: Johnson's Use of Locke's Concept," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 19 (1989), 267-76.
Alison Hickey, "'Extensive Views' in Johnson's Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland," SEL, 32:3 (Summer 1992), 537-53.
Bronwen Hickman, "The Women in Johnson's World," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 2 (1997), 7-15.
Nelson Hilton, Lexis Complexes (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1995), chapter 3 ("Restless Wrestling: Johnson's Rasselas"), pp. 38-55.
Charles H. Hinnant, Samuel Johnson: An Analysis (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988). Pp. ix + 148. Reviews:
Lionel Basney, ELN, 27:4 (1990), 74-76;
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, D:4 (1988-89), 62-63;
Lawrence Lipking, Biography, 12 (1989), 251-53;
John H. Middendorf, The Johnsonian News Letter, 48:1-2 (March-June 1988), 1;
M. S. Wagoner, Choice, 26:1 (Sept. 1988), 135;
T. F. Wharton, South Atlantic Review, 55:1 (Jan. 1990), 142-44.
Charles H. Hinnant, ed., Johnson and Gender: Special Issue of South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992). Reviews:
Marie E. McAllister, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 394-404.
Charles H. Hinnant, "Johnson and the Limits of Biography: Teaching the Life of Savage," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 107-13.
Charles H. Hinnant, "Steel for the Mind": Samuel Johnson and Critical Discourse (Newark: Univ. of Delaware Press, 1994). Pp. xi + 251. Reviews:
Lionel Basney, "Johnson's Theories and Ours," Sewanee Review, 105:2 (Spring 1997), 66-67; Greg Clingham, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 480-85;
Brian Hanley, The New Rambler, D:10 (1994-95), 70-71;
Jack Lynch, Choice, 31:10 (June 1994), 1578;
Edward Tomarken, Papers on Language & Literature, 32:2 (Spring 1996), 217-23;
Thomas Woodman, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 19:1 (Spring 1996), 113-14 (with another work).
Richard Holmes, Dr. Johnson and Mr. Savage (New York: Pantheon Books, 1993). Pp. xii + 260. Reviews:
Peter Ackroyd, Los Angeles Times, 28 Aug. 1994, p. 3;
J. T. Barbarese, "Samuel Johnson's Odd Friendship," Philadelphia Inquirer, 4 Sept. 1994, p. 3;
Janet Barron, New Statesman & Society, 6 (22 Oct. 1993), 37;
Anne Barton, New York Review of Books, 16 Feb. 1995, pp. 6-8;
John Bayley, London Review of Books, 15:21 (1993), 7-8;
Booklist, 90 (July 1994), 1916;
Charles A. Brady, "Retelling Samuel Johnson's Devil of a Friendship," The Buffalo News, 9 Oct. 1994, p. 6;
Gale E. Christianson, Albion, 27:1 (1995), 131-33;
Matthew M. Davis, Modern Age, 39:1 (Winter 1997), 73-76;
David Ellis, Cambridge Quarterly, 23:4 (1994), 384-88;
Laurel Graeber, The New York Times, 26 May 1996, section 7, p. 20;
James Gray, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 485-95;
The Independent, 3 Oct. 1993, p. 36;
David Isaacson, The Jerusalem Post Magazine, 10 Feb. 1996, p. 20;
Paul Johnson, The Spectator, 271 (30 Oct. 1993), pp. 32-33;
Joseph F. Keppler, The Seattle Times, 23 Oct. 1994, p. M2;
Rhoda Koenig, Vogue, 184:8 (Aug. 1994), 158-59;
John L. Mahoney, Southern Humanities Review, 30:2 (Spring 1996), 181-83;
David Nokes, TLS, 29 Oct. 1993, pp. 11-12;
Phoebe Pettingell, The New Leader, 77:10 (10 Oct. 1994), 14;
Publishers Weekly, 241:31 (1 Aug. 1994), 69;
Anthony Quinn, The Independent, 15 Jan. 1994, p. 29;
Pat Rogers, New York Times Book Review, 4 Sept. 1994, p. 14;
Peter Schwendener, The American Scholar, 64:3 (Summer 1995), 467-70;
Robert Taylor, The Boston Globe, 11 Sept. 1994, p. A19;
Alexander Theroux, Chicago Tribune, 30 Oct. 1994, p. 4;
Edward T. Wheeler, Commonweal, 121:19 (4 Nov. 1994), 32.
Anthea Hopkins, "The Dangerous Distinction of Authorship," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 21-24.
A. D. Horgan, Johnson on Language: An Introduction (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1994). Pp. ix + 226. Reviews:
Jack Lynch, Choice, 32 (April 1995), 4345;
Anne McDermott, Review of English Studies, 47 (1997), 593-94.
Gloria Horsley-Meacham, "The Johnsonian Jest in 'Benito Cereno,'" American Notes & Queries, 6:1 (Jan. 1993), 17-18.
Philip Howard, "Dr. Johnson: The Perfect Professional Fleet Street Hack," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 18-21.
Philip Howard, "Don't Take the Low Road," The Times, 23 Oct. 1993, Vision, p. 4. Review of BBC2's Tour of the Western Isles with Coltrane and Sessions.
Philip Howard, "In the Great Linguistic Debate, Both Sides Claim Dr. Johnson, and Rightly So," The Times, 9 Feb. 1996, Features.
N. J. Hudson, "Studies in the Moral and Religious Thought of Johnson," D.Phil. Dissertation, University of Oxford, 1984.
N. J. Hudson, "Samuel Johnson and the Literature of Common Life," British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 11:1 (Spring 1988), 39-50.
Nicholas Hudson, Samuel Johnson and Eighteenth-Century
Sadrul Amir, "Some Aspects of Johnson as a Critic," Dhaka University Studies Part A, 42:1 (1985), 40-58.
Hugh Amory, Dreams of a Poet Doomed at Last to Wake a Lexicographer (Cambridge, Mass.: Houghton Library, 1986). Pp. 8. 250 copies printed for the Johnsonians.
David R. Anderson, "Johnson and the Problem of Religious Verse," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 41-57.
David R. Anderson, "Classroom Texts: The Teacher, the Anthology," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 3-7.
David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb, eds., Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson (New York: MLA, 1993). Pp. x + 152. Reviews:
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 42:3 (Sept. 1995), 402-403.
Eric Anderson, "Robert Anderson: Johnson's Other Scottish Biographer," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1992), 1-7.
Christopher Andreae, "Exaggerate, Said Dr. Johnson," The Christian Science Monitor, 31 Oct. 1985, p. 34.
[Anon.], A Short-Title Catalog of Eighteenth Century Editions of Dr. Samuel Johnson's "Dictionary" in Special Collections, the Library of the School of Library and Information Science, the University of Western Ontario (London, Ont.: Univ. of Western Ontario, 1985).
[Anon.], "Boswell Find," The Times, 6 June 1985, p. 5h. Two newly discovered letters -- one by Johnson, one by Boswell -- in Canberra National Library.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson by Mrs. Thrale: The 'Anecdotes' of Mrs. Piozzi in Their Original Form," The New Yorker, 61 (30 Dec. 1985), 80.
[Anon.], "Boswell on Johnson on Conversation," The Christian Science Monitor, 3 June 1986, p. 42.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson's Dog," The Economist, 26 Dec. 1987, p. 7.
[Anon.], "Samuel Johnson's Tics," FDA Consumer, 22 (Sept. 1988), 29.
[Anon.], Samuel Johnson, Writer, 1709-1784 (Falls Church, Va.: Landmark Films, 1988). Videocassette.
[Anon.], Samuel Johnson, Author for All Seasons: An Exhibition of Manuscripts & Books from the Library of Loren & Frances Rothschild Held at the Doheny Memorial Library, University of Southern California (Pacific Palisades and Los Angeles: Rasselas Press & the USC Fine Arts Press, 1988). Pp. 33.
[Anon.], "Guests Outside Dr Samuel Johnson's House at 17 Gough Square, off Fleet Street, for its Reopening," The Independent, 24 May 1990, p. 6.
[Anon.], "Down into Egypt," Philosophy, 65:254 (Oct. 1990), 395-97. Editorial.
[Anon.], "Dr Johnson Relic May Be Replaced," The Independent, 11 March 1991, p. 2.
[Anon.], "'The Mantle of Johnson Descends on Gisbourne': Samuel Johnson and Some Controversies of the 1820's," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1991), 29-33.
[Anon.], "The Gobblies at the Gate," The Economist, 325:7786 (21 Nov. 1992), 104.
[Anon.], "John Wilkes, Esq., and Dr. Samuel Johnson," The Atlantic, 271:3 (March 1993), 87.
[Anon.], "Boxing: Dr Johnson's Plea Rings Out over Another Lull in Boxing," The Sunday Telegraph, 10 Oct. 1993, p. 5.
[Anon.], "On the Road with Johnson & Boswell & Co.," Telegraph Magazine, The Daily Telegraph, 11 Sept. 1993, p. 36.
[Anon.], "Samuel Johnson, Man of the Theater," New York, 28:19 (8 May 1995), 83.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson's Regard for Truth," The Herald (Glasgow), 17 Feb. 1996, p. 14.
[Anon.], "Dr. Johnson's Zeal for Gaelic," The Herald (Glasgow), 26 Feb. 1996, p. 12.
[Anon.], "Johnson's Bestiary," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1997), 24-29. Humorous piece on Dictionary definitions on animals.
[Anon.], "An Original 'Fame' School," Leicester Mercury, 16 June 1998, p. 4. Brief profile of the Dixie Grammar School in Market Bosworth.
Kelly Anspaugh, "Traveling to the Lighthouse with Woolf and Johnson," Virginia Woolf Miscellany, 45 (Spring 1995), 4-5.
Jonathan Arac, "The Media of Sublimity: Johnson and Lamb on King Lear," Studies in Romanticism, 26:2 (Summer 1987), 209-20.
Helen Ashmore, introd., Frances Reynolds and Samuel Johnson: A Keepsake to Mark the 286th Birthday of Samuel Johnson and the 49th Annual Dinner of the Johnsonians (Cambridge: Houghton Library, 1995). Pp. 28. At Harvard University, 15 Sept. 1995.
Helen Ashmore, "'Do Not, My Love, Burn Your Papers': Samuel Johnson and Frances Reynolds: A New Document," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 165-94.
James Atlas, "Dr. Johnson's Open House," House & Garden, 159 (Dec. 1987), 12.
James Atlas, "Holmes on the Case," The New Yorker, 70:29 (19 Sept. 1994), 57-65. On Holmes's Dr. Johnson and Mr. Savage.
James Atlas, "Over the Sea to Skye," Condé Nast Traveler, 31 (June 1996), 120-29.
Amad Awwad, "Samuel Johnson and the Issue of Holy Matrimony," M.A. Thesis, California State University, Hayward, 1986 (not seen).
Bernard Bailyn, "Does a Freeborn Englishman Have a Right to Emigrate?" American Heritage, 37 (1986), 24-31.
Paul Baines, "'Putting a Book out of Place': Johnson, Ossian and the Highland Tour," Durham University Journal, 53:2 (July 1992), 235-48.
Paul Baines, "Chatterton and Johnson: Authority and Filitation in the 1770s," in Thomas Chatterton and Romantic Culture, ed. Nick Groom (New York: St. Martin's, 1999), pp. 172-87.
John D. Baird, "'A Louse and a Flea': A Source for Johnson's Rejoinder," N&Q, 37:3 (Sept. 1990), 312.
Russell Baker, "Typical American Noises," New York Times, 146 (29 March 1997), 19(L).
Barry Baldwin, "Samuel Johnson and the Classics," Hellas: A Journal of Poetry and the Humanities, 2:2 (Fall 1991), 227-38.
Barry Baldwin, "Samuel Johnson and Vergil," Prudentia, 24 (1992), 37-63.
Barry Baldwin, "Johnson's Conglobulating Swallows," N&Q, 41:2 (June 1994), 199-206.
Barry Baldwin, "The Mysterious Letter 'M' in Johnson's Diaries," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 131-46.
Barry Baldwin, "A Classical Source for Johnson on Augustus and Lord Bute," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec. 1995), 467-68.
Barry Baldwin, "Samuel Johnson and Petronius," Petronian Society Newsletter, 25 (1995), 14-15.
Barry Baldwin, "Plautus in Johnson: An Unnoticed Quotation," N&Q, 43 (Sept. 1996), 305-306.
Laura Bandiera, Settecento e malinconia: saggi di letteratura inglese (Bologna: Patron Editore, 1995). Pp. 168. In Italian.
A. Banerjee, "Dr. Johnson's Daughter: Jane Austen and Northanger Abbey," English Studies, 71 (April 1990), 113-24.
Michel Baridon, "On the Relation of Ideology to Form in Johnson's Style," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 85-105.
Brooke Ann Barker, "The Representation of Prostitutes in Eighteenth-Century British Literature," Dissertation Abstracts International, 53 (1993), 2377A.
Carol Barnett, Elegy: An Epitaph on Claudy Phillips, a Musician (1988). Music by Carol Barnett, with words by Samuel Johnson. Holograph score at New York Public Library.
Louise K. Barnett, "Dr. Johnson's Mother: Maternal Ideology and the Life of Savage," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 304 (1992), 856-59.
Joseph F. Bartolomeo, "Johnson, Richardson, and the Audience for Fiction," N&Q, 33:4 (Dec. 1986), 517.
Joseph F. Bartolomeo, A New Species of Criticism: Eighteenth-Century Discourse on the Novel (Newark: Univ. of Delaware Press, 1994), chapter 2 ("Cracking Facades of Authority: Richardson, Fielding, and Johnson"), pp. 47-87.
Philip Edward Baruth, "Recognizing the Author-Function: Alternatives to Greene's Black-And-Red Book of Johnson Logia," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 35-59.
Philip Edward Baruth, "Positioning the (Auto)Biographical Self: Ideological Fictions of Self in Boswell, Johnson, and John Bunyan," Dissertation Abstracts International, 54:3 (Sept. 1993), 936A. Univ. of California, Irvine.
James G. Basker, "Dancing Dogs, Women Preachers and the Myth of Johnson's Misogyny," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 63-90.
James G. Basker, "Scotticisms and the Problem of Cultural Identity in Eighteenth-Century Britain," Eighteenth-Century Life, 15:1-2 (Feb.-May 1991), 81-95; reprinted in Sociability and Society in Eighteenth-Century Scotland (Edinburgh: Mercat Press, 1993).
James G. Basker, "Resisting Authority; Or, Johnson and the Wizard of Oz," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 28-34.
James G. Basker, "Samuel Johnson and the American Common Reader," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 3-30.
James Basker, "Samuel Johnson and the African-American Reader," The New Rambler, D:10 (1994-95), 47-57.
James G. Basker, "Coming of Age in Johnson's England: Adolescence in the Rambler," in Les Ages de la vie en Grande-Bretagne au XVIIIe siècle, ed. Serge Soupel (Paris: Sorbonne Nouvelle, 1995), pp. 197-212.
James G. Basker, "Dictionary Johnson amidst the Dons of Sidney: A Chapter in Eighteenth-Century Cambridge History," in Sidney Sussex College Cambridge: Historical Essays in Commemoration of the Quatercentenary, ed. D. E. D. Beales and H. B. Nisbet (Boydell Press, 1996), pp. 131-44.
James G. Basker, "Radical Affinities: Mary Wollstonecraft and Samuel Johnson," in Tradition in Transition: Women Writers, Marginal Texts, and the Eighteenth-Century Canon, ed. Alvaro Ribeiro and James G. Basker (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996), pp. 41-55.
James G. Basker, "An Eighteenth-Century Critique of Eurocentrism: Samuel Johnson and the Plight of Native Americans," in La Grande-Bretagne et l'Europe des Lumières, ed. Serge Soupel (Paris: Presses de la Sorbonne Nouvelle, 1996), pp. 207-20.
James G. Basker, "Samuel Johnson," in Britain in the Hanoverian Age 1714-1837, ed. Gerald Newman et al. (New York: Garland, 1997), pp. 378-80.
James G. Basker, "Myth upon Myth: Johnson, Gender, and the Misogyny Question," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 175-87.
Lionel Basney, "'His Proper Business': Johnson's Adjustment to Society," Texas Studies in Literature and Language, 32:3 (Fall 1990), 397-416.
Lionel Basney, "Prudence in the Life of Savage," ELN, 28:2 (Dec. 1990), 17-24.
Lionel Basney, "Narrative and Judgment in the Life of Savage," Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly, 14:2 (Spring 1991), 153-64.
Jonathan Bate, "Johnson and Shakespeare," The New Rambler, C:25 (1985-86), 11-13.
Jonathan Bate, "Johnson, Garrick and Macbeth," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 8-12.
Walter Jackson Bate, A Life of Allegory (Savannah, Armstrong State College, 1995). Videocassettes of the Conrad Aiken Video Lectures Series. Separate parts: "Samuel Johnson's Four Great Themes," "Samuel Johnson: The Dark Years"; "Johnson, Psychology & English Prose Style"; "Samuel Johnson: The Final Years"; "Boswell" (not seen).
Walter Jackson Bate, Samuel Johnson, 2nd ed. (Washington, D.C.: Counterpoint, 1998). Pp. xxii + 646. Reviews:
Bernice Grohskopf, The Virginian-Pilot, 13 Sept. 1998, p. J2.
James L. Battersby, "Life, Art, and the Lives of the Poets," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 26-56.
James L. Battersby, "The 'Lame and Impotent' Conclusion to The Vanity of Human Wishes Reconsidered," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 227-55.
John Beer, "Coleridge, Wordsworth and Johnson," Journal of the English Language and Literature (Seoul), 33 (1987), 25-42.
Michele A. Beilman, "Anthropological Particulars: Johnson's Ambivalent Pastoral Dream," Wascana Review of Contemporary Poetry and Short Fiction, 27:1 (Spring 1992), pp. 73-89.
V. I. Berezkina, "Iz istorii zhanra esse v angliiskoi literature XVIII v.: K probleme istoricheskoi poetiki zhanra," Filologicheskie Nauki, 4 (1991), pp. 49-61. In Russian.
Lisa Berglund, "Learning to Read The Rambler," Dissertation Abstracts International, 56:4 (Oct. 1995), 1363A. University of Virginia.
Lisa Berglund, "Writing to Mr. Rambler: Samuel Johnson and Exemplary Autobiography," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 29 (1999), 241-59.
Gina Berkeley, "Verses after Dr. Johnson," The New Rambler, D:10 (1994-95), 64.
Kevin J. Berland, "'The Air of a Porter': Lichtenberg and Lavater Test Physiognomy by Looking at Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 219-30.
Carol Ray Berninger, "Across Celtic Borders: Johnson, Boswell, Piozzi, Scott," Dissertation Abstracts International, 54 (1994), 4099A. Drew University.
A. M. Berrett, "Francis Barber's Marriage and Children: A Correction," N&Q, 35 (June 1988), 193.
James Biester, "Samuel Johnson on Letters," Rhetorica, 6:2 (Spring 1988), 145-66.
Anne Bindslev, "'Introducing Herself into the Chair of Criticism': Dr. Johnson, Monsieur Voltaire and Mrs. Montagu," in Proceedings from the Third Nording Conference for English Studies, Hässelby, 25-27 September 1986, ed. Ishrad Lindblad and Magnus Ljung, 2 vols. (Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiskell, 1987), pp. 519-31.
Harold Bloom, ed., Modern Critical Interpretations: James Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson (New York: Chelsea House, 1986). Pp. viii + 160. A collection of previously published essays.
Harold Bloom, ed. Modern Critical Views: Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell( New York: Chelsea House, 1986). A collection of previously published essays. Pp. viii + 280. Reviews:
Steven Lynn, South Atlantic Review, 55:2 (May 1990), 143-46.
Harold Bloom, The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1994), pp. 183-202.
Ronald Blythe, ed., The Pleasures of Diaries: Four Centuries of Private Writing (New York: Pantheon Books, 1989). Pp xi + 388. Includes selections from and discussions of Johnson's diaries.
Fredric Bogel, "Johnson and the Role of Authority," in The New Eighteenth Century: Theory, Politics, English Literature, ed. Felicity Nussbaum and Laura Brown (New York: Methuen, 1987), pp. 189-209. Reviews:
Howard Weinbrot, "The New Eighteenth Century and the New Mythology," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 353-407.
Fredric V. Bogel, The Dream of My Brother: An Essay on Johnson's Authority (Victoria, B.C.: Univ. of Victoria, 1990). Pp. 94. Reviews:
Stuart Sherman, Johnsonian News Letter, 50:3-51:3 (Sept. 1990-Sept. 1991), 8-9.
Gary Boire, "'Wide-wasting Pest': Social History in The Vanity of Human Wishes," Eighteenth-Century Life, 12:2 (May 1988), 73-85.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "John Bell's Poets of Great Britain: The 'Little Trifling Edition' Revisited," Modern Philology, 85:2 (Nov. 1987), 128-52.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "Bookselling and Canon-Making: The Trade Rivalry over the English Poets, 1776-1783," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 19 (1989), 53-69.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "The Jenyns Review: 'Leibnitian Reasoning' on Trial," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 92-98.
Thomas F. Bonnell, "Patchwork and Piracy: John Bell's 'Connected System of Biography' and the Use of Johnson's Prefaces," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 193-228.
William Brian Booth, "Samuel Johnson and Work," Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:11 (May 1991), 3750A.
[James Boswell], Boswell's London Journal (Princeton: Films for the Humanities, 1987). One videocassette (not seen).
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson (Ashland, Oregon: Classics on Tape, 1988-90). Read by Jim Killavey. Recording on 24 audio cassettes (not seen).
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1990). Pp. xvii + 618.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, ed. and abr. by John Canning (London: Methuen, 1991). Pp. xviii + 366.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson (London: David Campbell, 1992). Pp. xlix + 613.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, translated (into Hebrew) by Tova Rozen (Jerusalem: Carmel, 1992).
James Boswell, Samuel Johnson's Life and the Most Meaningful Events of His Times (Gloucester: Gloucester Art, 1993).
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, with an introduction by Claude Rawson (New York: Everyman's Library, 1993).
James Boswell, James Boswell's Life of Johnson: An Edition of the Original Manuscript in Four Volumes, I: 1709-1765, vol. 1 ed. Marshall Waingrow (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1994); vol. 2, ed. Bruce Redford (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1999). Pp. xxxix + 518; xviii + 303. Reviews:
John L. Abbott, Eighteenth-Century Scotland, 10 (1996), 14;
Linda Colley, London Review of Books, 17:18 (1995), 14-15 (with another work);
Henry Hitchings, TLS, 26 Nov. 1999, p. 33;
Alan Ingram, Yearbook of English Studies, 28 (1998), 319-20;
Allen Reddick, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 405-14;
Michael F. Suarez, S.J., TLS, 15 Dec. 1995, pp. 11-12;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 48 (1997), 114-16.
James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson [abridgment] (London: Naxos AudioBooks, Ltd., 1994). Two audio CDs read by Billy Hartman (not seen).
James Boswell, From the Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D [abridgment] (Edinburgh: Akros, 1995). Pp. 16. Limited edition of 130 numbered copies.
James Boswell, La vida del doctor Samuel Johnson, tr. and abr. by Antonio Dorta, with a preface by Fernando Savater, 2nd ed. (Madrid: Espasa Calpe, 1998). Pp. 265.
Ann Bowden and William B. Todd, "Scott's Commentary on The Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 229-48.
James T. Boulton, "The Wisdom of Samuel Johnson," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1997), 11-23.
Toni O'Shaughnessy Bowers, "Maternal Ideology and Matriarchal Authority: British Literature and the Making of Middle-Class Motherhood, 1680-1750," Dissertation Abstracts International, 52:9 (March 1992), 3289A. Stanford University.
Toni O'Shaughnessy Bowers, "Critical Complicities: Savage Mothers, Johnson's Mother, and the Containment of Maternal Difference," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 115-46.
Gay W. Brack, "Tetty and Samuel Johnson: The Romance and the Reality," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 147-78.
Gay Wilson Brack, "Sir John Hawkins, Biographer of Johnson: A Rhetorical Analysis," Dissertation Abstracts International, 53:3 (Sept. 1992), 815A. Arizona State University.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Epitaph on a Duckling," Books at Iowa, 45 (Nov. 1986), 62-79.
O M Brack, Jr., "Surviving as a Professional Author: The Case of Samuel Johnson," The New Rambler, D:2 (1986-87), 19-21.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson Bicentenary Exhibitions and Catalogues," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 451-65.
O M Brack, Jr., "The Gentleman's Magazine, Concealed Printing, and the Texts of Samuel Johnson's Lives of Admiral Robert Blake and Sir Francis Drake," Studies in Bibliography, 40 (1987), 140-46.
O M Brack, Jr., "Johnson's Life of Admiral Blake and the Development of a Biographical Technique," Modern Philology, 85:4 (May 1988), 523-31.
O M Brack, Jr., "Johnson's Use of Sources in the Life of Sir Francis Drake," Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 42 (1988), 197-215.
O M Brack, Jr., Bred a Bookseller: Samuel Johnson on Vellum Books: A New Essay for The Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California (Mesa, Arizona: Lofgreen's Printing, 1990). Pp. 8.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson Edits for the Booksellers: Sir Thomas Browne's 'Christian Morals' (1756) and 'The English Works of Roger Ascham' (1761)," Library Chronicle of the University of Texas, 21:3-4 (1991), pp. 12-39.
O M Brack, Jr., ed., Samuel Johnson and Thomas Maurice (Privately printed, 1992). Pp. 14. For the Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California, 1991, and the Johnson Society of the Central Region, 1992.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Preface to Abbé Prevost's Memoirs of a Man of Quality," Studies in Bibliography, 47 (1994), 155-64.
O M Brack, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Translations of Jean Pierre de Crousaz's Examen and Commentaire," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 60-84.
O M Brack, Jr., comp., Samuel Johnson in New Albion: A Descriptive Census of Rare and Useful Johnson Books and Manuscripts and Johnsoniana Now Located in California, with an introduction by Loren Rothschild (New York: The Johnsonians; Los Angeles: The Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California, 1997). Pp. 98.
O M Brack, Jr., and Mary Early, "Samuel Johnson's Proposals for the Harleian Miscellany," Studies in Bibliography, 45 (1992), 127-30.
Susan D. Bradley, "Cognitive Subjectivity and the Modern Informal Essay: A Study of Montaigne and Johnson," M.A. Thesis, Witchita State University, 1994 (not seen).
Geoffrey W. Brand, "A Night with Venus and a Year with Mercury: The Germ Theory in the Eighteenth Century," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 1 (1997), 17-21.
Richard Braverman, "The Narrative Architecture of Rasselas," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 91-111.
Peter M. Briggs, "'News from the Little World': A Critical Glance at Eighteenth-Century British Advertising," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 23 (1993), 29-45.
Adrian Bristow, ed., Dr Johnson and Mrs Thrale's Tour in North Wales 1774 (Wrexham: Bridge Books, 1995). Pp. 147.
J. Brody, "Constantes et modeles de la critique anti-'manieriste' à l'age 'classique,'" Rivista di itterature moderne e comparate, 40:2 (1987), 95-121.
Bertrand H. Bronson and J. M. O'Meara, eds., Selections from Johnson on Shakespeare (New Haven: Yale Univ. Press, 1986). Pp. xxxvii + 373. Reviews:
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 462-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 4;
Howard Mills, English, 39:163 (Spring 1990), 65-70 (with other works);
J. D. Fleeman, N&Q, 35 (March 1988), 98-99.
Christopher Brooks, "Johnson's Insular Mind and the Analogy of Travel: A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland," Essays in Literature, 18:1 (Spring 1991), pp. 21-36.
Christopher Brooks, "Nekayah's Courage and Female Wisdom," College Language Association Journal, 36:1 (Sept. 1992), 52-72.
Anthony E. Brown, Boswellian Studies: A Bibliography, 3rd ed. (Edinburgh: Edinburgh Univ. Press, 1991). Pp. xiii + 176. Reviews:
Pat Rogers, The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 40-41.
Morris R. Brownell, "Johnson and Mauritius Lowe," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 111-126.
Morris R. Brownell, "'Dr. Johnson's Ghost': Genesis of a Satirical Engraving," Huntington Library Quarterly, 50:4 (Autumn 1987), 338-57.
Morris R. Brownell, Samuel Johnson's Attitude to the Arts (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989). Pp. xvii + 195. Reviews:
Charles A. Knight, JEGP, 90:2 (1991), 245-46;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 38:1 (1991), 113-14;
P. D. McGlynn, Choice, 27:4 (Dec. 1989), 1967;
Carey McIntosh, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 404-408;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 49:3-50:2 (Sept. 1989-June 1990), 20;
Ronald Paulson, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 23:3 (Spring 1990), 358-65;
Claude Rawson, London Review of Books, 13:15 (1991), 15-17;
Irène Simon, English Studies, 72:3 (1991), 277-80;
Terry Skeats, Library Journal, 114:5 (15 March 1989), 17;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 42 (1991), 120-21.
Morris R. Brownell, "A Bull in the China Shop of Taste: Johnson's Prejudice against the Arts Illustrated," The New Rambler, D:6 (1990-91), 28-31.
Martine Watson Brownley, "The Antagonisms and Affinities of Johnson and Gibbon," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 16 (1986), 183-95.
Mary Bryden, "Samuel Johnson and Beckett's Happy Days," N&Q, 40:4 (Dec. 1993), 503-504.
Anthony Burgess, "The Dictionary Makers," Wilson Quarterly, 17:3 (1993), 104-10.
John J. Burke, Jr., "The Documentary Value of Boswell's Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 349-72.
John J. Burke, Jr., "When the Falklands First Demanded an Historian: Johnson, Junius, and the Making of History in 1771," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 291-310.
John J. Burke, Jr., "The Originality of Boswell's Version of Johnson's Quarrel with Lord Chesterfield," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 143-61.
John J. Burke, Jr., "Talk, Dialogue, Conversation, and Other Kinds of Speech Acts in Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson," in Compendious Conversations: The Method of Dialogue in the Early Enlightenment, ed. Kevin L. Cope (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1992), pp. 65-79.
John J. Burke, Jr., "Boswell and the Text of Johnson's Logia," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 9 (1998), 25-46. See also Greene, "'Beyond Probability': A Boswellian Act of Faith."
[Add to item 10/6:376] John J. Burke, Jr., and Donald Kay, eds., The Unknown Samuel Johnson (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1983). Reviews:
Frederick M. Keener, Yearbook of English Studies, 17 (1987), 299-300;
Steven Lynn, South Atlantic Review, 51:1 (Jan. 1986), 128-30 (with other works).
Robert Burrowes, Essay on the Stile of Doctor Samuel Johnson, ed. Frank H. Ellis (New York: AMS Press, 1992). Pp. xxii + 56. Reviews:
Greg Clingham, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 9 (1986), 248-49.
Jamie Bush, "Authorial Authority: Johnson's Life of Savage and Nabokov's Nikolai Gogol," Biography, 19:1 (Winter 1996), 19-40.
A. J. L. Busst, "Scottish Second Sight: The Rise and Fall of a European Myth," European Romantic Review, 5:2 (1995), 149-77.
Annette Cafarelli, "Narrative, Sequence, and Biography: Johnson and Romantic Prose," Dissertation Abstracts International, 46:9 (March 1986), pp. 2697A-2698A.
Annette Wheeler Cafarelli, "Johnson's Lives of the Poets and the Romantic Canon," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 403-35.
Annette Cafarelli, Prose in the Age of Poets: Romanticism and Biographical Narrative from Johnson to De Quincey (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1990). Pp. vi + 301.
Annette Wheeler Cafarelli, "Johnson and Women: Demasculinizing Literary History," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 61-114.
Michael Caldwell, "Dr. Clark and Mr. Holmes: Speculation in Johnsonian Biography," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 133-48.
Craig R. Callen, "Comments: Kicking Rocks With Dr. Johnson: A Comment on Professor Allen's Theory," Cardozo Law Review, 13:2-3 (Nov. 1991), 423.
Charles Leo Campbell, "Image and Symbol in Rasselas: Narrative Form and 'The Flux of Life,'" English Studies in Canada, 16:3 (Sept. 1990), 263-77.
Charles Campbell, "Johnson's Arab: Anti-Orientalism in Rasselas," Abhath al-Yarmouk, 12:1 (1994), 51-66.
Ian Campbell, "Boswell's Life of Johnson," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1996), 1-10.
John Ashton Cannon, Samuel Johnson and the Politics of Hanoverian England (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994). Pp. vii + 326. Reviews:
Jeremy Black, N&Q, 42 (Dec. 1995), 499-500;
O M Brack, Jr., Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 49:2 (1995), 169-74 (with other works);
Linda Colley, TLS, 4 Aug. 1995, pp. 6-7 (with another work);
H. T. Dickinson, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 19:2 (Autumn 1996), 220;
M. Fitzpatrick, History Today, 46:5 (May 1996), 60 (with another work);
E. H. Gould, Journal of Modern History, 69:4 (Dec. 1997), 828-29 (with another work);
Donald J. Greene, "The Double Tradition of Samuel Johnson's Politics," Huntington Library Quarterly, 59:1 (1997), 105-23 (with another work);
Nicholas Hudson, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 9 (1998), 337-47;
Thomas Kaminski, Philological Quarterly, 76:1 (Winter 1997), 101-104;
G. Lamoine, Etudes Anglaises, 49:1 (Jan.-March 1996), 90-91;
Jack Lynch, Choice, 33:1 (Sept. 1995), 110;
J. Phillips, Albion, 28:1 (Spring 1996), 109-11;
Murray G. H. Pittock, JEGP, 95:4 (Oct. 1996), 558-60;
Christopher Reid, The New Rambler, D:11 (1995-96), 62-63;
James J. Sack, American Historical Review, 101:3 (June 1996), 847-48;
P. D. G. Thomas, English Historical Review, 112 (June 1997), 778;
John Wiltshire, English Language Notes, 34:1 (Sept. 1996), 98-104 (with another work).
Erik Carlquist, "Samuel Johnson före Boswell," Kulturtidskriften Horisont, 34:2 (1987), 10-11. In Swedish.
Geoffrey Carnall, "A Conservative Mind under Stress: Aspects of Johnson's Political Writings," in Re-Viewing Samuel Johnson, ed. Nalini Jain (Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1991), pp. 30-46.
Wallace Chafe, "Cowper's Connoisseur #138 and Samuel Johnson," Georgetown University Round Table on Languages and Linguistics, (1985), pp. 214-25.
Sir Robert Chambers, A Course of Lectures on the English Law: Delivered at the University of Oxford 1767-1773, ed. Thomas M. Curley, 2 vols. (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1986). Pp. xix + 483; xv + 445. Reviews:
John L. Abbot, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 498-503;
David Ibbetson, N&Q, 35 (1988), 540-41;
Jeffrey Hackney, Review of English Studies, 39 (Nov. 1988), 561-62;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 46:2-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 1-2.
David Chandler, "John Henry Colls and the Remarks on the Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec. 1995), 469-71.
Naresh Chandra, "Dr. Johnson and the English Language," in Essays on Dr. Samuel Johnson, ed. T. R. Sharma (Meerut, India: Shalabh, 1986), pp. 5-24.
Chester Chapin, "Religion and the Nature of Samuel Johnson's Toryism," Cithara: Essays in the Judaeo-Christian Tradition, 29:2 (May 1990), 38-54.
Chester Chapin, "Samuel Johnson, Anthropologist," Eighteenth-Century Life, 19 (Nov. 1995), 22-37.
Chester Chapin, "Samuel Johnson and the Locke-Stillingfleet Controversy," N&Q, 44:2 (June 1997), 210-11.
Chester Chapin, "Samuel Johnson, Samuel Clarke and the Toleration of Heresy," Enlightenment and Dissent, 16 (1997), 136-50.
James Aaron Chapman, "The Foundation of Samuel Johnson's Morality," M.A. Thesis, University of Southern Mississippi, 1995 (not seen).
Warren Chernaik, "Johnson and the Imagination," The New Rambler, E:1 (1997-98), 42-49.
Charles Waddell Chesnutt, Who and Why Was Samuel Johnson (Akron: Northern Ohio Bibliophilic Society, 1991). Pp. iv + 19. With a preface by Robert A. Tibbetts. Keepsake volume of the text of a 1911 speech by Chesnutt.
Leslie A. Chilton, "Samuel Johnson and the Adventures of Telemachus," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1993), 8-13.
Chung-Ho Chung, "The Great Cham and the Mirror: An Essay on the Multiple Perspectives in Samuel Johnson's Literary Criticism," Dissertation Abstracts International, 48:9 (March 1988), 2342A.
Jonathan Clark, "The Heartfelt Toryism of Dr. Johnson," TLS, 14 Oct. 1994, pp. 17-18.
J. C. D. Clark, Samuel Johnson: Literature, Religion and English Cultural Politics from the Restoration to Romanticism (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1994). Pp. xiv + 270. Reviews:
O M Brack, Jr., Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 49:2 (1995), 169-74 (with other works);
John Cannon, The English Historical Review, 112:446 (April 1997), 491-93;
Matthew M. Davis, Modern Age, 39:1 (Winter 1997), 73-76;
Paul Dean, "Augustans and Romantics," English Studies, 77:1 (Jan. 1996), 81-85 (with other works);
M. Fitzpatrick, History Today, 46:5 (May 1996), 60 (with another work);
Mark Goldie, Political Studies, 43:4 (Dec. 1995), 777;
E. H. Gould, Journal of Modern History, 69:4 (Dec. 1997), 828-29 (with another work);
Donald Greene, "The Double Tradition of Samuel Johnson's Politics," Huntington Library Quarterly, 59:1 (1997), 105-23 (with another work);
John Gross, Sunday Telegraph, 13 Nov. 1994, p. 10;
H. C. Kraus, Historische Zeitschrift, 263:1 (Aug. 1996), 233-34;
R. B. Levis, Church History, 66:4 (Dec. 1997), 845-46;
P. Monod, American Historical Review, 102:1 (Feb. 1997), 103-104;
David Nokes, TLS, 25 Nov. 1994, pp. 8-9;
J. T. Scanlan, Religion & Literature, 29:1 (Spring 1997), 95-101;
John Wiltshire, English Language Notes, 34:1 (Sept. 1996), 98-104 (with another work);
David Womersley, The Historical Journal, 39:2 (June 1996), 511-20 (with other works).
J. C. D. Clark, "The Politics of Samuel Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 27-56.
J. C. D. Clark, "The Cultural Identity of Samuel Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 15-70.
J. C. D. Clark, "Religious Affiliation and Dynastic Allegiance in Eighteenth-Century England: Edmund Burke, Thomas Paine and Samuel Johnson," ELH, 64:4 (Winter 1997), 1029-67.
E. J. Clery, "Laying the Ground for Gothic: The Passage of the Supernatural from Truth to Spectacle," in Exhibited by Candlelight: Sources and Developments in the Gothic Tradition, ed. Valeria Tinkler-Villani, Peter Davidson, and Jane Stevenson (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1995), pp. 65-74.
[Add to item 3:250] James L. Clifford, Dictionary Johnson: Samuel Johnson's Middle Years (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1979). Reviews:
Garry Wills, The New Republic, 182 (2 Feb. 1980), 36-37.
Dorothy Peake Cline, "The Word Abused: Problematic Religious Language in Selected Prose Works of Swift, Wesley, and Johnson," Dissertation Abstracts International, 52:9 (March 1992), 3290A. University of Delaware.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson on Dryden and Pope," Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Cambridge, 1986.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson's Use of Two Restoration Poems in his 'Drury-Lane' Prologue," The New Rambler, D:1 (1985-86), 45-50.
G. J. Clingham, "'The Inequalities of Memory': Johnson's Epitaphs on Hogarth," English: The Journal of the English Association, 35:153 (Autumn 1986), 221-32.
Greg Clingham, "A Minor Source for Johnson's 'Life of Pope,'" Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1986-87), 53-54.
G. J. Clingham, "'Himself that Great Sublime': Johnson's Critical Thinking," Etudes Anglaises: Grande-Bretagne, Etats-Unis, 41:2 (April-June 1988), 165-78.
Gregory J. Clingham, "Johnson's Criticism of Dryden's Odes in Praise of St. Cecilia," Modern Language Studies, 18:1 (Winter 1988), 165-80.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson, Homeric Scholarship, and 'The Passes of the Mind,'" The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 113-70.
Greg Clingham, "Johnson's Prayers and Meditations and the 'Stolen Diary Problem': Reflections on a Biographical Quiddity," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 83-95.
Greg Clingham, ed., New Light on Boswell: Critical and Historical Essays on the Occasion of the Bicentenary of "The Life of Johnson" (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991). Pp. xix + 235. Reviews:
Paul K. Alkon, Newsletter of the Samuel Johnson Society of Southern California, (1991), 5;
Philip E. Baruth, Biography, 16 (1993), 59-64;
Fredric Bogel, Modern Philology, 91 (May 1994), 517-23;
Alan Bold, Herald Weekender, 29 June 1991;
English Studies, 73 (1992), 537-38;
Forum for Modern Language Studies, 28:3 (1992), 292-93;
James Gray, Dalhousie Review, 71 (1991-92), 502-507;
Irma S. Lustig, The Age of Johnson, 5 (1992), 447-51;
P. D. McGlynn, Choice, 29:6 (Feb. 1992), 3178;
William B. Ober, Verbatim, 18:4 (Spring 1992), 13-14;
John B. Radner, Eighteenth-Century Scotland, 6 (1992), 15-16;
Claude Rawson, London Review of Books, 29 Aug. 1991, p. 17;
Angus Ross, Scottish Literary Journal, 39 (1994), 9-12;
Stuart Sherman, Johnsonian News Letter, 51 (Sept. 1991), 10-12;
John B. Vance, South Atlantic Review, 58 (1993), 101-109;
William Wain, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 16 (1993), 84;
Marcus Walsh, Review of English Studies, 44 (1993), 428-29;
Robert Ziegler, Papers on Language & Literature, 29 (1993), 457-49.
Greg Clingham, "Truth and Artifice in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 207-29.
Greg Clingham, James Boswell: The Life of Johnson (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1992). Pp. xviii + 131. Landmarks of World Literature Series. Reviews:
Gene Blanton, South Atlantic Review, 59 (Spring 1994), 125-29;
John J. Burke, Jr., 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, & Inquiries in the Early Modern Era, 3 (1997), 409-16;
English Studies, 75 (1994), 555-56;
A. E. Jones, Choice, 30:9 (May 1993), 4836;
Thomas E. Kinsella, The Age of Johnson, 5 (1992), 452-56;
Laurence Urdang, Verbatim, 20 (Autumn 1993), 8-9 (with another work);
Karina Williamson, Scottish Literary Journal, 39 (1994), 12-14;
Thomas Woodman, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 18 (1995), 92-94;
William Zachs, Eighteenth-Century Scotland, 7 (1993), 30-31.
Greg Clingham, "Boswell's Historiography," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 307 (1993), 1765-69.
Greg Clingham, "Another and the Same: Johnson's Dryden," in Literary Transmission and Authority: Dryden and Other Writers, ed. Jennifer Brady and Earl Miner (Cambridge University Press, 1993), pp. 121-59.
Greg Clingham, "Double Writing: The Erotics of Narrative in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in James Boswell: Psychological Interpretations, ed. Donald J. Newman (New York: St. Martin's, 1995), pp. 189-214.
Greg Clingham, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997). Pp. xx + 266. Reviews:
Contemporary Review, 1584 (1 Jan. 1998), 54;
Peter Barry, English, 47 (Spring 1998), 81-87;
Matthew M. Davis, The New Rambler, D:12 (1996-97), 56-57;
Robert Devens, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21:2 (1998), 233-34;
Kathleen Kemmerer, East-Central Intelligencer, 13:2 (May 1999), 19-21;
G. Lamoine, Etudes anglaises, 51:3 (July-Sept. 1998), 347-48 (in French);
Jack Lynch, Choice, 35:11-12 (July-Aug. 1998), 6080;
Jack Lynch, Essays in Criticism, 49:1 (Jan. 1999), 75-81;
Alvaro Ribeiro, S.J., The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 292-302.
Greg Clingham, "Life and Literature in Johnson's Lives of the Poets," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 161-91.
G. J. Clingham and N. Hopkinson, "Johnson's Copy of the Iliad at Felbrigg Hall, Norfolk," The Book Collector, 37:4 (Winter 1988), 503-21.
Martin Clout, "Hester Thrale and the Globe Theatre," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 34-50.
Hamilton E. Cochrane, Boswell's Literary Art: An Annotated Bibliography of Critical Studies, 1900-1985 (New York: Garland, 1992). Pp. ix + 162.
S. G. Cohen, "Samuel Johnson (1709-1784), British Poet, Critic, Essayist, and Lexicographer," Allergy and Asthma Proceedings, 17:1 (Jan.-Feb. 1996), 52-55.
Frank Collings, "Dr. Johnson and his Medical Advisers," The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 3-18.
Michael Dennis Collins, "Taxation No Tyranny: Samuel Johnson, Barrister to the Crown," M.A. Thesis, California State University, Northridge, 1989 (not seen).
Syndy M. Conger, "Three Unlikely Fellow Travellers: Mary Wollstonecraft, Yorick, Samuel Johnson," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 305 (1992), 1667-68.
Donald N. Cook, "The History of Dr. Johnson's Summer-House," The New Rambler, C:24 (1983), 49-58.
Robert Cooperman, "Boswell on Dr. Johnson's Friend Mrs. Anna Williams," Antigonish Review, 64 (Winter 1986), 101. Poem on Anna Williams.
Kevin L. Cope, "Rational Hope, Rational Benevolence, and Johnson's Economy of Happiness," Eighteenth-Century Life, 10:3 (Oct. 1986), 104-21.
Kevin L. Cope, "Rational Hope, Rational Benevolence, and Ethical Accounting: Johnson and Swift on the Economy of Happiness," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 181-213.
Robert Cording, "Dr. Johnson: From the Western Isles," Sewanee Review, 94:4 (Oct.-Dec. 1986), 519-20. Poem.
John Craig, "Numeracy and Dr Johnson," The New Rambler, D:11 (1995-96), 47-54.
Thomas Crawford, "Boswell and the Rhetoric of Friendship," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 11-27.
André Crépin, "Samuel Johnson, Élisabeth Bourcier et la conscience chrétienne," in Ténebres et lumière: Essais sur la religion, la vie et la mort chrétiennes en Angleterre en hommage à la mémoire d'Elisabeth Bourcier (Paris: Didier, 1987), 7-10. In French.
Mary Jane Burbank Crotty, "Images of Women: Boswell's Scotland Tour with Johnson Revisited," Dissertation Abstracts International, 49:12 (June 1989), 3730A.
Robin N. Crouch, "Samuel Johnson on Drinking," Dionysos: The Literature and Addiction TriQuarterly, 5:2 (Fall 1993), 19-27.
E. Cruikshanks, "Samuel Johnson and Jacobitism: A Response to Donald Greene," TLS, 8 Sept. 1995, p. 17.
Marisol Cuevas Segarra, "Samuel Johnson's Rasselas and Voltaire's Candide: A Comparation [sic]," M.A. Thesis, Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1986 (not seen).
Paul K. Cuneo, "Another Odd Couple: Dr. Samuel Johnson and David Garrick," Biblio, 3:6 (June 1998), 22.
Thomas M. Curley, "Samuel Johnson and Sir Robert Chambers: A Creative Partnership in English Law," Indian Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 1:1 (Summer 1986), 1-16 (not seen).
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson's Last Word on Ossian: Ghostwriting for William Shaw," in Aberdeen and the Enlightenment, ed. Jennifer J. Carter (Aberdeen: Aberdeen Univ. Press, 1987), pp. 375-431.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson's Tour of Scotland and the Idea of Great Britain," British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 12 (1989), 135-44.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson and Burke: Constitutional Evolution versus Political Revolution," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 263 (1989), 265-68.
Thomas M. Curley, "Samuel Johnson and India," in Re-Viewing Samuel Johnson, ed. Nalini Jain (Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1991), pp. 9-29.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson and America," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 31-74.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson No Jacobite; or, Treason Not Yet Unmasked," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 137-62.
Thomas M. Curley, "Johnson No Jacobite; or, Treason Not Yet Unmasked: Part II, A Quotable Rejoinder from A to C," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 127-31.
M. A. Curr, "Anchoring the Imagination: A Study of Dr Johnson's Latin Poetry," Index to Theses, 44:4 (1995), 1436. University of London.
Leopold Damrosch, Jr., Fictions of Reality in the Age of Hume and Johnson (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1989). Pp. ix + 262. Reviews:
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 43 (1992), 274-75.
Leopold Damrosch, Jr., ed., Major Authors on CD-ROM: Samuel Johnson and James Boswell (Woodbridge, Conn.: Primary Source Media, 1997). Complete works of Johnson; near-complete works of Boswell. Reviews:
Cheryl LaGuardia, Library Journal, 123:20 (Dec. 1998), 168.
Stephen C. Danckert, ed., The Quotable Johnson: A Topical Compilation of His Wit and Moral Wisdom (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1992). Pp. 148. With a foreword by Joseph Sobran.
Joel Allan Dando, "The Poet as Critic: Byron in His Letters and Journals: Case Studies of Shakespeare and Johnson," Dissertation Abstracts International, 46:7 (Jan. 1986), 1947A.
Marlies K. Danziger, "Self-Restraint and Self-Display in the Authorial Comments in The Life of Johnson," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 162-73.
Robertson Davies, Why I Do Not Intend to Write an Autobiography (Toronto: Harbourfront Reading Series, 1993). Pp. 15. 500 copies. Fiction based on Johnson.
Ross Davies, "Bless You, Dr. Johnson," Connoisseur, 214 (Sept. 1984), 36.
Bertram Hylton Davis, Thomas Percy: A Scholar-Cleric in the Age of Johnson (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1989). Pp. xi + 361.
Matthew M. Davis, "'The Most Fatal of All Faults': Samuel Johnson on Prior's Solomon and the Need for Variety," Papers on Language & Literature, 33:4 (Fall 1997), 422-37.
Philip Davis, In Mind of Johnson: A Study of Johnson the Rambler (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1989). Pp. 318. Reviews:
Isobel Grundy, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 444-46;
Charles A. Knight, JEGP, 90:2 (1991), 243-45;
P. D. McGlynn, Choice, 27:2 (Oct. 1989), 798;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 48:3-49:2 (Sept. 1988-June 1989), 21-22.
Philip Davis, "Extraordinarily Ordinary: The Life of Samuel Johnson," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 4-17.
Robert Adams Day, "Psalmanazar's 'Formosa' and the British Reader (Including Samuel Johnson)," in Exoticism in the Enlightenment, ed. G. S. Rousseau and Roy Porter (Manchester: Manchester Univ. Press, 1989), pp. 197-221.
Merrowyn Deacon, "Dr. Johnson and Music," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 2:1 (1998), 1-7.
Tim Dean, "Psychopoetics of Lexicography: Johnson with Lacan," Literature and Psychology, 37:4 (1991), 9-28.
Frank Delaney, A Walk to the Western Isles: After Boswell & Johnson (London: HarperCollins, 1993). Pp. xii + 308.
Lillian De La Torre, The Return of Dr. Sam. Johnson, Detector: As Told by James Boswell (New York: International Polygonics, 1985). Pp. 191. Fiction.
Lillian De La Torre, The Exploits of Dr. Sam Johnson, Detector: Told as if by James Boswell (New York: International Polygonics, 1987). Pp. 220. Fiction.
Lillian De La Torre, Dr. Sam Johnson, Detector (Charlotte Hall, Md.: Recorded Books, 1989). Sound recording of fiction on 5 cassettes.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., Johnson's Dictionary and the Language of Learning (Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1986). Pp. xii + 303. Reviews:
N. F. Blake, Lore and Language, 7:1 (1988), 113-14;
Philip Mahone Griffith, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 453-55;
Isobel Grundy, Yearbook of English Studies, 18 (1988), 324-26;
Elizabeth Hedrick, "Reading Johnson's Dictionary," Annals of Scholarship, 7 (1990), 91-101;
James McLaverty, N&Q, 35:2 (1988), 239-41;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 462-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 3;
Albert Pailler, Etudes anglaises, 40:2 (April-June 1987), 216-17;
Murray G. H. Pittock, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 12 (1989), 111-12;
Allen Reddick, Modern Philology, 86:3 (1989), 312-16;
Pat Rogers, London Review of Books, 9:1 (1987), 13-14;
Robert Stack, Times Higher Education Supplement, 731 (1986), 15;
Keith Walker, TLS, 30 Jan. 1987, p. 123;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 39:153 (1988), 113-14.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "The Politics of Johnson's Dictionary," PMLA, 104:1 (Jan. 1989), 64-74.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Samuel Johnson and the Reading Revolution," Eighteenth-Century Life, 16:3 (Nov. 1992), 86-102.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Johnson's Dictionary and the 'Teutonick' Roots of the English Language," in Language and Civilization: A Concerted Profusion of Essays and Studies in Honor of Otto Hietsch, I & II, ed. Claudia Blank and Patrick Selim Huck (Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1992), I, 20-36.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., The Life of Samuel Johnson: A Critical Biography (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993). Pp. xviii + 356. Reviews:
Kate Chisholm, Times Educational Supplement, 4015 (11 June 1993), S10;
Nicholas Hudson, Modern Philology, 93:2 (Nov. 1995), 263-67;
Allan Ingram, Yearbook of English Studies, 25 91995), 296-97 (with another work);
Paul J. Korshin, Modern Philology, 93:2 (Nov. 1995), 267-71;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 42:1 (March 1995), 98-99;
David Nokes, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 495-500;
Joseph Rosenblum, Library Journal, 118:5 (15 March 1993), 76-77;
Michael F. Suarez, "Uncommon Reader," Review of English Studies, 46 (Aug. 1995), 415-17;
J. O. Tate, National Review, 39 (27 Feb. 1987), p. 54;
J. W. M. Thompson, The Times, 15 July 1993, Features;
Keith Walker, TLS, 24 Sept. 1993, p. 26;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 49:196 (Nov. 1998), 519-21;
The Observer, 29 Jan. 1994, p. 20 (not seen).
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Latter-Day Humanists and the Pastness of the Past," Common Knowledge, 3 (1993), 67-76.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., Samuel Johnson and the Life of Reading (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1997). Pp. xviii + 270. Reviews:
Biblio, 3:7 (July 1998), 73;
James Gray, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 285-92;
T. G. Kass, Cithara, 37:2 (May 1998), 44-45;
Jack Lynch, Choice, 35:3 (Nov. 1997), 1365;
Michael F. Suarez, S.J., TLS, 5 Sept. 1997, p. 36;
David Womersley, Review of English Studies, 49:196 (Nov. 1998), 519-21.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., "Johnson's Dictionary," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 85-101.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., and Gwin J. Kolb, "The Preliminaries to Dr. Johnson's Dictionary: Authorial Revisions and the Establishment of the Texts," Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), 121-34.
Robert DeMaria, Jr., and Gwin J. Kolb, "Johnson's Dictionary and Dictionary Johnson," Yearbook of English Studies, 28 (1998), 19-43.
Ralph De Toledano, "Dr. Johnson Revisited: Samuel Johnson and the Evolution of Language," National Review, 43:12 (8 July 1991), 44. Comments on Redford's edition of the Letters.
Helen Elizabeth Deutsch, "'The Confines of Distinction': Horace, Alexander Pope, Samuel Johnson and the Making of the Literary Career," Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:9 (March 1991), 3080A-81A. University of California, Berkeley.
Helen Deutsch, "'The Name of an Author': Moral Economics in Johnson's Life of Savage," Modern Philology, 92 (Feb. 1995), 328-45.
Helen Deutsch, "Doctor Johnson's Autopsy, or Anecdotal Immortality," The Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation, 40:2 (Summer 1999), 113-27.
Peter Jan De Voogd, "'The Great Object of Remark': Samuel Johnson and Laurence Sterne," Essays on English and American Literature and a Sheaf of Poems, ed. J. Bakker, J. A. Verleun, and J v. d. Vriesenaerde (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1987) [i.e., Costerus, vol. 63], pp. 65-74.
Gerard De Vries, "Pale Fire and The Life of Johnson: The Case of Hodge and Mystery Lodge," The Nabokovian, 26 (Spring 1991), 44-49.
Bernd Dietz, "Tenerife en las letras inglesas: Posibles antecedentes de un texto de Samuel Johnson," in Serta Gratulatoria in Honorem Juan Regulo, I: Filologia, ed. Ana Regulo Rodriguez and Maria Regulo Rodriguez (La Laguna: Univ. de La Laguna, 1985), pp. 223-30. In Spanish.
R. J. Dingley, "Johnson's 'Reply to Impromptu Verses by Baretti': A Clue to Dating," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec 1995), 468.
J. H. Dirckx, "The Death of Samuel Johnson: Was It Hastened by Digitalis Intoxication?" American Journal of Dermatopathology, 6:6 (Dec. 1984), 531-36.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Dr. Johnson and the Dissenters," Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library, 68:2 (Spring 1986), 373-409.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Some Unitarian Perceptions of Dr. Johnson," Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society, 19:3 (1989), 139-52.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Dr Johnson at Oxford, 1759," N&Q, 36:1 (March 1989), 66-68.
G. M. Ditchfield, "Dr. Johnson's Derbyshire Connections," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 30-42.
G. M. Ditchfield, "A Deathbed Anecdote of Dr. Johnson," N&Q, 42:4 (Dec. 1995), 468-69.
John Dixon, "Tempering Ambitions: The Cultural Project of Samuel Johnson's Moral Essays," Dissertation Abstracts International, 52:12 (June 1996), 4784A. Boston University.
John Converse Dixon, "Politicizing Samuel Johnson: The Moral Essays and the Question of Ideology," College Literature, 25:3 (Fall 1998), 67-90.
Peter Dixon, "Goldsmith and Johnson," The New Rambler, E:1 (1997-98), 50-57.
Francis Doherty, "Rape of the Lock: Stretching the Limits of Allusion," Anglia: Zeitschrift fur Englische Philologie, 111:3-4 (1993), 355-72.
Daniel E. Doll, "'Daughters of Earth and Sons of Heaven': Johnson on Swift on Language," Lamar Journal of the Humanities, 17:2 (Fall 1991), 23-39.
William Domnarski, "Samuel Johnson and the Law," The New Rambler, C:23 (1982), 2-10.
Ian Donaldson, "Samuel Johnson and the Art of Observation," ELH, 53:4 (Winter 1986), 779-99.
Ian Donaldson, The Death of the Author and the Lives of the Poet: The David Fleeman Memorial Lecture, 1994 (Melbourne: The Johnson Society of Australia, 1994 [i.e., 1995]).
Margaret Anne Doody, "The Law, the Page, and the Body of Women: Murder and Murderess in the Age of Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 126-60.
Hugh Douglas, "Highlanders and Heroines: Dr Johnson's Meeting with Flora Macdonald," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 15-20.
William C. Dowling, "Structure and Absence in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in Modern Essays on Eighteenth-Century Literature, ed. Leopold Damrosch, Jr. (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1988), pp. 355-78.
J. A. Downie, "Swift and Johnson: The Problems of the Life of Swift," The New Rambler, C:24 (1983), 26-27.
Paul M. Duke, "Players on Unbroken Spinets: Thomas Wolfe and James Boswell," The Thomas Wolfe Review, 16:2 (Fall 1992), 47-51.
R. D. Dunn, "Samuel Johnson's Prologue to A Word to the Wise and the Epilogue by 'A Friend,'" ELN, 25:3 (March 1988), 28-35.
Simon During, "Waiting for the Post: Some Relations between Modernity, Colonization, and Writing," ARIEL, 20:4 (Oct. 1989), 31-61.
Simon During, "Waiting for the Post: Some Relations between Modernity, Colonization, and Writing," in Past the Last Post: Theorizing Post-Colonialism and Post-Modernism, ed. Ian Adam and Helen Tiffin (Calgary: Univ. of Calgary Press, 1990), pp. 23-45.
Simon During, "Waiting for the Post: Some Relations between Modernity, Colonization and Writing," in History and Post-War Writing, ed. Theo D'haen and Hans Bertens (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1990), pp. 227-57.
John A. Dussinger, "Dr. Johnson's Solemn Response to Beneficence," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 57-69.
John A. Dussinger, "'The Solemn Magnificence of a Stupendous Ruin': Richard Savage, Poet Manqué," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 167-82.
John A. Dussinger, "Hester Piozzi, Italy, and the Johnsonian Aether," South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992), 46-58.
Robert Easting, "Johnson's Note on 'Aroint thee, witch!'" N&Q, 35:4 (Dec. 1988), 480-82.
Mary Hyde Eccles and Donald D. Eddy, eds., Dr Johnson & Mrs Thrale, the End of Their Long Friendship: Letters in the Hyde Collection (Somerville, N.J.: The Four Oaks Farm Library, 1992). Pp. 28. Contains "Unraveling the Fabric of Friendship" by Bruce Redford, "Provenance" by Mary Hyde Eccles, and facsimiles of four letters. For the annual dinner of The Johnsonians commemorating Johnson's two hundred eighty-third birthday at the Grolier Club in New York.
Donald D. Eddy, Sale Catalogues of the Libraries of Samuel Johnson, Hester Lynch Thrale (Mrs. Piozzi) and James Boswell (New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll Books, 1993). Pp. 328. Facsimiles. Reviews:
T. H. Howard Hill, Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, 88:1 (March 1994), 113-14.
D. D. Eddy and J. D. Fleeman, "A Preliminary Handlist of Books to which Dr. Samuel Johnson Subscribed," Studies in Bibliography, 46 (1993), 187-220. Reviews:
Kevin Berland, East-Central Intelligencer, n.s. 8:3 (Sept. 1994), 9;
Anne McDermott, Review of English Studies, 46:181 (Feb. 1995), 137;
Paul Tankard, The Bulletin of the Bibliographical Society of Australia and New Zealand, 18:1 (1994), 56-58.
William Edinger, Johnson and Detailed Representation: The Significance of the Classical Sources (Victoria: Univ. of Victoria, 1997). Pp. 105. ELS Monograph Series no. 72.
William Edinger, "Eighteenth-Century Language Theory and Imlac's Tulip," Hellas, 7:2 (1992), 171-91.
David Edward, "Johnson, Boswell and the Conflict of Loyalties," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1995), 1-17.
Gavin Edwards, "Why Are Human Wishes Vain? On Reading Samuel Johnson's The Vanity of Human Wishes," Proceedings of the English Association of the North, 2 (1986), 52-62.
Gavin Edwards, "The Illegitimation of Richard Savage," Sydney Studies in English, 17 (1991-92), 67-74.
Owen Dudley Edwards, "Rambling Sam: The Dr. Johnson Show, Southside Courtyard, Theatre," The Scotsman, 17 Aug. 1997, p. FEST9. Brief extracts from Rambling Sam.
Margaret Eliot and P. G. Suarez, Dr. Johnson Said... (London: Privately printed for the Trustees of Dr. Johnson's House by Thomas Harmsworth, 1988). Pp. ???.
Helen Yvonne Elliott, "Johnson, Nature, and Women: The Early Years," Dissertation Abstracts International, 55:9 (March 1995), 2840A. University of North Carolina, Greensboro.
David Ellis, "Biography and Friendship: Johnson's Life of Savage," in Imitating Art: Essays in Biography, ed. David Ellis (London: Pluto Press, 1993), pp. 19-35.
Ben Elton and Richard Curtis, "Ink and Incapability," episode 2 of Blackadder the Third. Produced by John Lloyd; directed by Mandie Fletcher; written by Ben Elton and Richard Curtis. The Prince Regent (Hugh Laurie) wants to become the patron of Johnson (Robbie Coltrane) for his Dictionary. After Baldrick (Tony Robinson) accidentally burns the sole manuscript, Blackadder (Rowan Atkinson) has to recreate the entire thing from scratch. Also includes appearances by a roguish group of poets, including Coleridge (Jim Sweeney), Shelley (Lee Cornes), and Byron (Steve Steen).
Ann Engar, "Johnson in a Western Civilization Course," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 64-70.
[Add to item 10/6:380] James Engell, ed., Johnson and His Age (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, 1984). Reviews:
Isobel Grundy, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 10 (1987), 103-105;
Anne McDermott, Critical Quarterly, 27:4 (1985), 86-88;
Pat Rogers, Prose Studies, 10:1 (1987), 111-12.
Mark English, "Samuel Johnson: A Portrait in OED-Antedatings," N&Q, 40:3 (Sept. 1993), 331-34.
William H. Epstein, Recognizing Biography (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1987), chapter 4 ("Patronizing the Biographical Subject: Johnson's Life of Savage"), pp. 52-70; chapter 6 ("Recognizing the Biographer: Boswell's Life of Johnson"), pp. 90-137.
William H. Epstein, "Professing the Eighteenth Century," Profession (1985), pp. 10-15. On scholarly publishing, with Johnson and Boswell as examples.
Ruthi Roth Erdman, "Rich Man, Poor Man, Beggar Man Thief: Samuel Johnson and the Economics of Poverty," M.A. Thesis, Central Washington University, 1991 (not seen).
Howard Erskine-Hill, "The Poet and Affairs of State in Johnson's Lives of the Poets," Man and Nature/ L'Homme et la nature, 6 (1987), 93-113.
Howard Erskine-Hill, "The Political Character of Samuel Johnson: The Lives of the Poets and a Further Report on The Vanity of Human Wishes," in The Jacobite Challenge, ed. Eveline Cruickshanks and Jeremy Black (Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers, 1988), pp. 161-76.
Howard Erskine-Hill, "Johnson the Jacobite? A Response to the New Introduction to Donald Greene's The Politics of Samuel Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 3-26.
Howard Erskine-Hill, Poetry of Opposition and Revolution, Dryden to Wordsworth (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1996), chapter 4 ("The Decision of Samuel Johnson"), pp. 111-38; chapter 5 ("The Vanity of Human Wishes in Context"), pp. 139-66. Reviews:
Jayne Elizabeth Lewis, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 10 (1999), 329-37.
Howard Erskine-Hill, "A Kind of Liking for Jacobitism," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 3-13.
Timothy Erwin, "Johnson's Life of Savage and Lockean Psychology," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 18 (1988), 199-212.
Timothy Erwin, "Voltaire and Johnson Again: The Life of Savage and the Sertorius Letter (1744)," Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 284 (1991), 211-23.
Timothy Erwin, "On Teaching Johnson and Lockean Empiricism," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 35-41.
Hideichi Eto, "Samuel Johnson and the Gentleman's Magazine," Musashino Bijutsu Daigaku kenkyu kiyo, 20 (1990), 109. In Japanese.
Scott David Evans, "Samuel Johnson's 'General Nature' in Its Context," Dissertation Abstracts International, 58:11 (1997), A4278. Arizona State University.
David Fairer, "Thomas Warton and his Friends," The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 36-37.
David Fairer, "Dr. Johnson's Gift to Trinity College Library and the Dating of Letter 318," The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 47-49.
Faridoun Farrokh, "The Vanity of Human Wishes: Samuel Johnson and the Discovery of the Poetic Self," in Selected Essays from the International Conference on Word and World of Discovery, ed. Gerald Garmon (Carrollton, GA: Department of English, West Georgia College, 1992), pp. 50-60.
Stuart Feder, "Transference Attended the Birth of the Modern Biography," American Imago, 54:4 (Winter 1997), 399-415. On Johnson's Life of Savage.
Jan Fergus, "The Provincial Buyers of Johnson's Dictionary and its Alternatives," The New Rambler, D:6 (1990-91), 3-5.
Gillian Ferguson, "Boswell the Philanderer Rides Again," The Sunday Times, 8 Aug. 1993 (not seen). Interview with John Sessions on BBC2's Tour of the Western Isles.
W. Ferguson, "Samuel Johnson's Views on Scottish Gaelic Culture," Scottish Historical Review, 77 (Oct. 1998), 183-98.
Bonita Mae Ferrero, "Reconstructing the Canon: Samuel Johnson and the Universal Visiter," Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:8 (Feb. 1991), 2751A. University of Connecticut.
Bonnie Ferrero, "Samuel Johnson and Arthur Murphy: Curious Intersections and Deliberate Divergence," ELN, 28:3 (March 1991), 18-24.
Bonnie Ferrero, "Johnson, Murphy, and Macbeth," Review of English Studies, 42:166 (May 1991), 228-32.
Bonnie Ferrero, Reconstructing the Canon: Samuel Johnson and the Universal Visiter (New York: Peter Lang, 1993). Pp. 146.
Bonnie Ferrero, "Samuel Johnson, Richard Rolt, and the Universal Visiter," Review of English Studies, 44:174 (May 1993), 176-86.
Claude Fierobe, "Rasselas: Le Decor voile de l'impossible utopie," La Licorne, 10 (1986), 45-54. In French.
G. J. Finch, "Reason, Imagination and Will in Rasselas and The Vanity of Human Wishes," English: The Journal of the English Association, 38:162 (Autumn 1989), 195-209.
Stephen Fix, "The Contexts and Motives of Johnson's Life of Milton," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 107-32.
Stephen Fix, "Teaching Johnson's Critical Writing," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 128-34.
Stephen Fix, "Prayer, Poetry, and Paradise Lost: Samuel Johnson as Reader of Milton's Christian Epic," in Seeing into the Life of Things: Essays on Literature and Religious Experience, ed. John L. Mahoney (New York: Fordham Univ. Press, 1998), pp. 126-51.
Richard F. Fleck, "Samuel Johnson's Rasselas: A Perspective on Islam," Weber Studies, 10:1 (Winter 1993), 50-57.
[Add to item 1/3:32] J. D. Fleeman, ed., A Preliminary Handlist of Copies of Books Associated with Dr. Samuel Johnson (Oxford: Oxford Bibliographic Society, 1984). Reviews:
O M Brack, Jr., The Library, 9:1 (1987);
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 48-49.
J. D. Fleeman, "Dr. Johnson and 'Miss Fordice,'" N&Q, 33 (March 1986), 59-60.
David Fleeman, "Johnson's Dictionary (1755)," Trivium, 22 (Summer 1987), 83-88.
J. D. Fleeman, "Memorabilia," N&Q, 36:1 (March 1989), 1-5.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson and Boswell in Scotland," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1989-90), 51-72.
J. D. Fleeman, "Uttoxeter Commemorative Address," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1989-90), 77-80.
J. D. Fleeman, The Genesis of Johnson's Dictionary (Harlow, Essex, England: Longman, 1990). Part of the Longman facsimile edition of Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson in the Schoolroom: George Fulton's Miniature Dictionary (1821)," in An Index of Civilisation: Studies of Printing and Publishing History in Honour of Keith Maslen, ed. Harvey Ross, Wallace Kirsop, and B. J. McMullin (Clayton, Victoria, Australia: Center for Bibliographical and Textual Studies, Monash Univ., 1993), pp. 163-71.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson's Shakespeare (1765): The Progress of a Subscription," in Writers, Books, and Trade, ed. O M Brack, Jr. (New York: AMS Press, 1994), pp. 355-65.
J. D. Fleeman, "Johnson's Secret," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 147-50.
J. D. Fleeman, "Michael Johnson, the 'Lichfield Librarian,'" Publishing History, 39 (1996), 23-44.
Susan Adele Fleming, "Mary Shelley and Samuel Johnson: Social and Ethical Implications of the Individual's Pursuit of Perfection," M.A. Thesis, Auburn University, 1990 (not seen).
William Fletcher, "Dr Johnson and the Seven Provinces," The New Rambler D:2 (1986-87), 27-36. On Johnson and Dutch languages, culture, and history.
Timothy Jon Florschuetz, "An Examination of the Nile River in Samuel Johnson's The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia," M.A. Thesis, Arizona State University, 1991 (not seen).
Robert Folkenflik, "Rasselas and the Closed Field," Huntington Library Quarterly, 57 (1994), 337-52.
Robert Folkenflik, "Samuel Johnson," in Encyclopædia Britannica, 15th ed. (Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 1995). Also available through Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
Robert Folkenflik, "Johnson's Politics," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 102-13.
Alexander Malcolm Forbes, "The Measure and the Choice: Empiricism and Revelation in Johnson's 'Vanity of Human Wishes,' 'Rambler,' and 'Rasselas,'" Dissertation Abstracts International, 51:4 (Oct. 1990), 1238A.
Alexander M. Forbes, "Johnson, Blackstone, and the Tradition of Natural Law," Mosaic, 27:4 (Dec. 1994), 81-98.
Alexander M. Forbes, "Ultimate Reality and Ethical Meaning: Theological Utilitarianism in Eighteenth-Century England," Ultimate Reality and Meaning, 18:2 (1995), 119-38.
Helen Forsyth, "Samuel Johnson," The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 27. Poem.
Helen Forsyth, "Samuel Johnson," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), p. vii. Sonnet on Johnson, reprinted from above.
Ra Foxton, "A Johnsonian Heritage: The Hussey Copy of Boswell's Life," Eighteenth-Century News (Melbourne), 24 (1985), 9-17.
Roslyn Reso Foy, "Johnson's Rasselas: Women in the 'Stream of Life,'" ELN, 32:1 (Sept. 1994), 39-53.
Peter France, "Western Civilization and Its Mountain Frontiers," History of European Ideas, 6:3 (1985), 297-310.
Michael Fraser, "Chaucer, Johnson, and Shakespeare on CD-ROM," Computers & Texts, 12 (July 1996), 21-25. Review essay on Anne McDermott's edition of the Dictionary on CD-ROM.
Russell Fraser, "What is Augustan Poetry?" Sewanee Review, 98:4 (Fall 1990), 620-85.
Ian Frazier, "Boswell's Life of Don Johnson," The New Yorker, 62 (15 Sept. 1986), 32. Parody of Boswell's Life about television actor Don Johnson.
Ronald H. Fritze, "The Oxford English Dictionary: A Brief History," Reference Services Review, 17:3 (1989), 61-70.
Raymond-Jean Frontain, "Johnson in the British Literature Survey Course," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 56-63.
Tetsu Fujii, "James Boswell Reconstructed from Various Editions of the Encyclopaedia Britannica," The Bulletin of Central Research Institute: Fukuoka University, 116 (1989), 29-60. In Japanese.
Tetsu Fujii, "Johnson's 'Roscommon' in the 18th Century," Sophia English Studies, 16 (1991), 3-18.
Tetsu Fujii, "An Essay concerning How Dr. Johnson's 'Life of Collins' Exerted Influence in the 18th Century," Fukuoka University Review of Literature & Humanities, 24 (1993), 1233-63. In Japanese.
Tetsu Fujii, "How Samuel Johnson Has Been Described in Successive Editions of the Encyclopaedia Britannica," Studies in Eighteenth-Century English Literature, ed. The Johnson Society of Japan (Tokyo: Yusho-Do, 1996), 71-91.
Tetsu Fujii, "A List of Johnson and Boswell Studies in Japan: Those Published in Book Form from 1871 to 1997," The Bulletin of Central Research Institute of Fukuoka University, 208 (1998), 39-122. In Japanese.
Dwight C. Gabbard, "The Drudgery of Wit -- Samuel Johnson as an Engineer of Language," M.A. Thesis, San Francisco State University, 1993 (not seen).
Jose Angel Garcia Landa, "'The Enthusiastick Fit': The Function and Fate of the Poet in Johnson's Rasselas," Cuadernos de investigacion filologica, 17:1-2 (1991), 103-26 (not seen).
Howard Gaskill, "What Did James MacPherson Really Leave on Display at His Publisher's Shop in 1762?" Scottish Gaelic Studies, 16 (Winter 1990), 67-89.
Genevieve Gebhart, "'A Violent Passion': Pugnacity and the Prizefighting Phenomenon in Johnson's England -- A Montage," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 3 (1999), 37-57.
Mark Gellis, "Burke, Campbell, Johnson, and Priestley: A Rhetorical Analysis of Four British Pamphlets of the American Revolution," Dissertation Abstracts International, 54:7 (1993), 2555A. Purdue University.
Christine Gerrard, The Patriot Opposition to Walpole: Politics, Poetry, and National Myth, 1725-1742 (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1995), chapter 8 ("Jacobites and Patriots: Johnson and Savage").
R. B. Gill, "The Enlightened Occultist: Beckford's Presence in Vathek," in Vathek and the Escape from Time: Bicentenary Revaluations, ed. Kenneth W. Graham (New York: AMS, 1990), pp. 131-43.
Thomas B. Gilmore, "Implicit Criticism of Thomson's Seasons in Johnson's Dictionary," Modern Philology, 86:3 (Feb. 1989), 265-73.
John Glendening, "Young Fanny Burney and the Mentor," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 281-312.
John Glendening, "Northern Exposures: English Literary Tours of Scotland, 1720-1820," Dissertation Abstracts International, 53 (1993), 3221A.
Christina Eleanor Godlewski, "'It Matters Not How a Man Dies, but How He Lives': Samuel Johnson and the Rhetoric of Consolation," M.A. Thesis, University of Maryland at College Park, 1992 (not seen).
Joel J. Gold, "The Failure of Johnson's Irene: Death by Antithesis," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 201-14.
Joel J. Gold, "Literate Conversation, Scholarship, and 'Clubbability': High Spots and Low among Johnsonians of the Midwest," Chronicle of Higher Education, 34:46 (27 July 1988), 82-83.
Michael Goldberg, "'Demigods and Philistines': Macaulay and Carlyle -- A Study in Contrasts," Studies in Scottish Literature, 24 (1989), 116-28.
Richard L. Golden, "Medicine & Numismatics: Samuel Johnson and the Golden Angel," The Numismatist, 109:4 (1 April 1996), 411.
James O. Goldsborough, "Summertime and a Chance to Visit One of the World's Great Men of Letters," The San Diego Union-Tribune, 8 July 1999, p. B13.
Allegra S. Goodman, "Virtuous Philosophers and Chameleon Poet: The Shakespeare of Samuel Johnson and John Keats," Dissertation Abstracts International, 58:7 (1997), A2667. Stanford University.
Stephen Goodwin, "Dr. Johnson's Gem in Peril," The Independent, 4 Nov. 1996, p. 9. Newhailes House, praised by Johnson as "the most learned drawing-room in Europe," threatened with destruction.
Scott Paul Gordon, "A Note on Reynolds's 'The Infant Johnson,'" Johnsonian News Letter, 47:3-4 (Sept.-Dec. 1988), 16.
Henry Gordon-Clark, "Johnson and Savage," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 2 (1997), 1-5.
Henry Gordon-Clark, "Was Johnson a Thief?: Plagiarism in the Account of the Life of Richard Savage," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 3 (1999), 59-67.
James Gray, "Auctor et Auctoritas: Dr. Johnson's Views on the Authority of Authorship," English Studies in Canada, 12:3 (Sept. 1986), 269-84.
James Gray, "'A Native of the Rocks': Johnson's Handling of the Theme of Love," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 106-22.
James Gray, "Johnson's Portraits of Charles XII of Sweden," in Domestick Privacies: Samuel Johnson and the Art of Biography, ed. David Wheeler (Lexington: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1987), pp. 70-84.
James Gray, "'The Athenian Blockheads': New Light on Johnson's Oxford," The New Rambler, D:3 (1987-88), 30-45.
James Gray, "Dr Johnson and the Theatre," The New Rambler, D:4 (1988-89), 37-38.
James Gray, "Johnson, Cromwell, and the Jacobite Cause," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 90-153.
James Gray, "Some Thoughts on the Eighteenth Century Response to Miracles," The New Rambler, D:7 (1991-92), 4-5.
James Gray and T. J. Murray, "Dr. Johnson and Dr. James," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 213-46.
Stephen Gray, "Johnson's Use of Some African Myths in Rasselas," Standpunte, 38:2 (April 1985), 16-23.
Jonathon Green, "Samuel Johnson: The Pivotal Moment," in Chasing the Sun: Dictionary Makers and the Dictionaries They Made (New York: Henry Holt, 1996), pp. 251-83.
Julien Green, Suite anglaise (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1988). Pp. 125. In French.
Mary Elizabeth Green, "Defoe and Johnson in Scotland," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 20 (1990), 303-15.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson," in The Craft of Literary Biography, ed. Jeffrey Meyers (New York: Schocken Books, 1985), pp. 9-32.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson, Psychobiographer: The Life of Richard Savage," in The Biographer's Art: New Essays, ed. Jeffrey Meyers (London: Macmillan, 1987), 11-30.
[Add to item 2:44] Donald Greene, The Oxford Authors: Samuel Johnson (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1984). Reviews:
Greg Clingham, "Johnson in Memoriam," The Cambridge Quarterly, 15 (1986), 77-84;
Thomas D'Evelyn, Christian Science Monitor, 5 Dec. 1984, p. 35;
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 50-52;
Jenny Mezciems, Review of English Studies, 39:154 (1988), 297-99;
Albert Pailler, Etudes anglaises, 39:2 (April-June 1986), 217-18;
Samuel H. Woods, Jr., Yearbook of English Studies, 18 (1988), 327-29.
Donald Greene, "Johnsonian Punctuation," Johnsonian News Letter, 47:3-4 (Sept.-Dec. 1988), 7-9. On the punctuation of the letter to Chesterfield.
Donald Greene, Samuel Johnson, updated ed. (Boston: Twayne, 1989). Pp. xvii + 206.
Donald Greene, The Politics of Samuel Johnson, 2nd ed. (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1990). Pp. lxxix + 356. Reviews:
Alistair Boag, TLS, 24-30 Aug. 1990, p. 905;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 38:4 (Dec. 1991), 545-46;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 49:3-50:2 (Sept. 1989-June 1990), 21-22;
Patrick O'Flaherty, "Samuel Johnson's Politics: Some Points of Disagreement," Dalhousie Review, 72:3 (Fall 1992), 382-98;
Robert Ziegler, Papers on Language & Literature, 28 (Fall 1992), 457-75.
Donald Greene, "Housman and Johnson," Johnsonian News Letter, 48:3-49:2 (Sept. 1988-June 1989), 24-26.
Donald Greene, "The Logia of Samuel Johnson and the Quest for the Historical Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 3 (1990), 1-33.
Donald Greene, "Johnson's Doctorate," TLS, 14-20 Sept. 1990, p. 974. See also items 574a and 892a.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson," TLS, 23 Aug. 1991, p. 13. On the authenticity of Johnson's "Opera: an Exotick and Irrational Entertainment." See also item 755a.
Donald Greene, "'A Secret Far Dearer to Him than His Life': Johnson's 'Vile Melancholy' Reconsidered," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 4 (1991), 1-40.
Donald Greene, "Johnson's 'Saintdom': A Note," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1992), 43-44.
Donald Greene, "The Myth of Johnson's Misogyny: Some Addenda," South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992), 6-17.
Donald Greene, "Johnson on Columbus," Johnsonian News Letter, 52:2-53:2 (June 1992-June 1993), 23-25.
Donald Greene, "The World's Worst Biography," The American Scholar, 62:3 (Summer 1993), 365-82.
Donald Greene, "Progress towards Where? Conservation of What?" The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 88-102. Response to Nagashima, "Progressive or Conservative? Two Trends in Johnson Studies."
Donald Greene, "Catholicism in Johnson's Lobo," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1994), 12-18.
Donald Greene, "Was Dr Johnson Really a Jacobite?" TLS, 18 Aug. 1995, pp. 13-14.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson and Jacobitism," TLS, 13 Oct. 1995, p. 19.
Donald Greene, "Johnson: The Jacobite Legend Exhumed: A Rejoinder to Howard Erskine-Hill and J. C. D. Clark," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 57-136.
Donald Greene, "Samuel Johnson's 'Body Language': A New Perspective," in Enlightened Groves: Essays in Honour of Professor Zenzo Suzuki, ed. Eiichi Hara, Hiroshi Ozawa, and Peter Robinson (Tokyo: Shohakusha, 1996), pp. 240-62.
Donald Greene, "Jonathan Clark and the Abominable Cultural Mind-Set," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 71-88.
Donald Greene, "Dr Johnson's Charity," TLS, 2 May 1997, p. 17.
Donald Greene, "'Beyond Probability': A Boswellian Act of Faith," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 9 (1998), 47-80. A response to Burke, "Boswell and the Text of Johnson's Logia."
Donald Greene and John A. Vance, Chief Glories: The Life of Samuel Johnson, on Proper Study: The Life of Alexander Pope; and Chief Glories: The Life of Samuel Johnson (Research Triangle Park, N.C.: National Humanities Center, 1985). Audio disk: interviews with Greene and Vance on side B. Side A features Maynard Mack on Pope (not seen).
Donald Greene and John A. Vance, A Bibliography of Johnsonian Studies, 1970-1985 (Victoria: Univ. of Victoria, 1987). Pp. vi + 116. Reviews:
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, D:2 (1986-87), 25-27;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 47:3-4 (Sept.-Dec. 1988), 1.
Dustin Griffin, "Johnson's Lives of the Poets and the Patronage System," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 5 (1992), 1-33.
Dustin Griffin, Literary Patronage in England, 1650-1800 (New York: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996), chapter 9, pp. 220-45.
Dustin Griffin, "Regulated Loyalty: Jacobitism and Johnson's Lives of the Poets," ELH, 64:4 (Winter 1997), 1007-27.
Robert John Griffin, "Samuel Johnson and the Act of Reflection," Dissertation Abstracts International, 46:11 (May 1986), 3358A.
Robert J. Griffin, "Reflection as Criterion in The Lives of the Poets," Dr. Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, ed. Harold Bloom (New York: Chelsea, 1986), pp. 239-62.
Philip Mahone Griffith, "Samuel Johnson and King Charles the Martyr: Veneration in the Dictionary," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 235-61.
Philip Mahone Griffith, "Boswell's Johnson and the Stephens (Leslie Stephen and Virginia Woolf)," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 151-64.
Gloria Sybil Gross, "Johnson and the Uses of Enchantment," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 299-311.
Gloria Sybil Gross, "'A Child Is Being Beaten': Suggestions toward a Psychoanalytical Reading of Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 181-218.
Gloria Gross, "Mentoring Jane Austen: Reflections on 'My Dear Dr. Johnson,'" Persuasions: Journal of the Jane Austen Society of North America, 11 (16 Dec. 1989), 53-60.
Gloria Sybil Gross, This Invisible Riot of the Mind: Samuel Johnson's Psychological Theory (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 1992). Pp. x + 198. Reviews:
O M Brack, Jr., Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 49:2 (1995), 169-74 (with other works);
G. P. Brooks, Isis, 85:2 (June 1994), 339-40;
J. R. Griffin, Choice, 30:3 (Nov. 1992), 464;
Isobel Grundy, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 27:1 (1993), 174-75;
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 43:2 (June 1996), 225;
Anne McDermott, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 17:2 (Autumn 1994), 219-20;
Catherine N. Parke, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 391-93;
Joel Weinsheimer, JEGP, 92:4 (1993), 556-58.
Gloria Sybil Gross, "Reading Johnson Psychoanalytically," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 49-55.
Isobel Grundy, ed., Samuel Johnson: New Critical Essays (London: Vision; New York: Barnes & Noble, 1984). Pp. 208. Reviews:
James Gray, Dalhousie Review, 65:2 (1985), 300-307;
J. H. Leicester, The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 55-57;
Lawrence Lipking, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21 (Fall 1987), 109-13;
Albert Pailler, Etudes anglaises, 39:2 (April-June 1986), 218;
John A. Vance, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 492-98;
David Wheeler, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 9:2 (1986), 254-56;
Samuel H. Woods, Jr., Yearbook of English Studies, 18 (1988), 326-27.
Isobel Grundy, "The Stability of Truth," The New Rambler, C:25 (1984), 35-44.
Isobel Grundy, Samuel Johnson and the Scale of Greatness (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1986). Pp. 278. Reviews:
Paul Alkon, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 437-42;
James T. Boulton, N&Q, 35:1 (1988), 97-98;
John Burke, South Atlantic Review, 53:1 (Jan. 1988), 128-30;
Greg Clingham, Review of English Studies, 38 (1987), 394-96;
Leopold Damrosch, Jr., MLR, 83:4 (1988), 962-64;
Lawrence Lipking, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21 (Fall 1987), 109-13;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 462-47:2 (June 1986-June 1987), 2-3;
David Nokes, Times Higher Education Supplement, 713 (1986), 19;
Laura Payne, CEA Critic, 51:1 (1988), 142-46;
Rachel Trickett, The New Rambler, D:2 (1986-87), 24-25.
Isobel Grundy, "Samuel Johnson as Patron of Women," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 1 (1987), 59-77.
Isobel Grundy, "Swift and Johnson," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 2 (1989), 154-80.
Isobel Grundy, "Celebrare domestica facta: Johnson and Home Life," The New Rambler, D:6 (1990-91), 6-14.
Isobel Grundy, "Restoration and Eighteenth Century (1660-1780)," in An Outline of English Literature, ed. Pat Rogers (Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1992), pp. 200-49.
Isobel Grundy, "A Note on Johnson's Charles, Shakespeare's Caesar," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 51.
Isobel Grundy, "'Over Him We Hang Vibrating': Uncertainty in the Life of Johnson," in Boswell: Citizen of the World, Man of Letters, ed. Irma S. Lustig (Lexington, KY: Univ. Press of Kentucky, 1995), pp. 184-202.
Isobel Grundy, "Johnson's Bookman," The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 8 (1997), 393-404. Review essay on Studies in Bibliography, 48 (1995), ed. David L. Vander Meulen.
Peter Gruner, "Flocking to the Shrine of Dr Johnson, the Great Debunker," Evening Standard, 20 Nov. 1992, p. 16.
John Guillory, "The English Common Place: Lineages of the Topographical Genre," Critical Quarterly, 33:4 (Winter 1991), 3-27.
David Gunto, "Kicking the Emperor: Some Problems of Restoration Parallel History," 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era, 3 (1997), 109-27.
John T. Guthrie, "Research: An Uncloistered Curriculum," Journal of Reading, 24:2 (1980), 188-89. On using Boswell's Life in the reading classroom.
Jean H. Hagstrum, "Samuel Johnson among the Deconstructionists," The Georgia Review, 39:3 (Fall 1985), 537-47.
Jean H. Hagstrum, "Samuel Johnson among the Deconstructionists," in Re-Viewing Samuel Johnson, ed. Nalini Jain (Bombay: Popular Prakashan, 1991), pp. 112-24.
Bonnie Hain and Carole McAllister, "James Boswell's Ms. Perceptions and Samuel Johnson's Ms. Placed Friends," South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992), 59-70.
William H. Halewood, "The Majesty of The Vanity of Human Wishes," in Fresh Reflections on Samuel Johnson, ed. Prem Nath (Troy: Whitston, 1987), pp. 256-68.
Edward M. Hallowell, M.D., "The Example of Samuel Johnson," in Worry: Controlling It and Using It Wisely (New York: Pantheon, 1997), 216-38.
Alan Hamilton, "Dr Johnson's City of Philosophers Still Satisfies the Inquisitive Walker," The Times, 5 Aug. 1995, Home news.
Ian Hamilton, Keepers of the Flame: Literary Estates and the Rise of Biography (Pimlico, 1994). Pp. viii + 344.
Michael Hancher, "Bailey and After: Illustrating Meaning," Word and Image, 8:1 (1992), 1-20.
Sally N. Hand, "The 'Finest Bit of Blue': Samuel Johnson and the Bluestocking Assemblies," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 6-18.
Brian Joseph Hanley, "Samuel Johnson's Military Writings," M.A. Thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1992 (not seen).
Brian Hanley, "Colonel Gimbel and the Literary Anvil: or Why Dr Johnson's Letters Belong to the U.S. Airforce Academy's Aeronautical Collection," The New Rambler, D:9 (1993-94), 83-87.
Brian Hanley, "Johnson's Contemporary Reputation," The New Rambler, D:11 (1995-96), 56-62.
Brian Hanley, "The Prevailing Tone of Johnson's Military Commentary," The New Rambler, D:12 (1996-97), 39-45.
John Hardy, "Samuel Johnson's Literary Criticism," Essays and Studies, 39 (1986), 62-77.
John Hardy, "Samuel Johnson," in Dryden to Johnson, ed. Roger Lonsdale (New York: Bedrick, 1987), pp. 279-311.
John Hardy, "Line 361 of The Vanity of Human Wishes," N&Q, 39:4 (Dec. 1992), 480-81.
David Harley, "Johnson and Neo-Hippocratic Medicine," The New Rambler, D:12 (1996-97), 32-39.
Richard L. Harp, ed. Dr. Johnson's Critical Vocabulary: A Selection from His "Dictionary" (Lanham, MD: Univ. Press of America, 1986). Pp. xlv + 268. "The purpose of this book ... is to put into general circulation those portions of the Dictionary that persons interested in literature and writing would find of greatest value." Reviews:
Lionel Basney, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 21 (Fall 1987), 113-17;
John H. Middendorf, Johnsonian News Letter, 49:3-50:2 (Sept. 1989-June 1990), 22-23;
James Rettig, American Reference Books Annual, 19 (1988), 1074.
Richard Harries, "Sermon Preached in Lichfield Cathedral Sunday, 24th September, 1989," Transactions of the Johnson Society (Lichfield), (1989), 16-18.
Jocelyn Harris, "Samuel Johnson, Samuel Richardson, and the Dial-Plate," British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 9:2 (Autumn 1986), 157-63.
Jeffrey Peter Hart, "Does the University Have a Future?" National Review, 40 (1 April 1988), 32. Imagined conversation between Samuel Johnson and William James.
Kevin Hart, "Economic Acts: Johnson in Scotland," Eighteenth-Century Life, 16:1 (Feb. 1992), 94-110.
Kevin Hart, "Johnson as Monument," The Critical Review, 34 (1994), 33-49.
Kevin Hart, Samuel Johnson and the Culture of Property (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1999). Pp. 244.
Franz Josef Hausmann, "Samuel Johnson (1709-1784): Bicentenaire de sa mort," Lexicographica, 1 (1985), 239-42. In French.
Emma Hawari, "Samuel Johnson and Lessing's Lexicographical Work," New German Studies, 13:3 (Autumn 1985), 185-95.
E. E. E. Hawari, "Johnson and Lessing: A Study of Johnson's Critical Theory and Practice," Index to Theses, 43:2 (1994), 442.
Emma Hawari, Johnson's and Lessing's Dramatic Critical Theories and Practice with a Consideration of Lessing's Affinities with Johnson (Bern: P. Lang, 1991). Pp. 293. Reviews:
G. F. Parker,
Cambridge Quarterly, 19:3 (1990), 243-54.
Clement Hawes, "Johnson and Imperialism," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 114-26.
William Anthony Hay, "Reason, Truth, and Community in Samuel Johnson's Later Work," Consortium on Revolutionary Europe: Selected Papers, 4 (1997), pp. 53-60 (not seen).
Ernest Heberden, "Dr. Heberden and Dr. Johnson," The New Rambler, D:3 (1987-88), 9-21.
Elizabeth Hedrick, "Locke's Theory of Language and Johnson's Dictionary," Eighteenth-Century Studies, 20:4 (Summer 1987), 422-44.
Elizabeth Hedrick, "Fixing the Language: Johnson, Chesterfield, and The Plan of a Dictionary," ELH, 55:2 (Summer 1988), 421-42.
Donna Heiland, "Remembering the Hero in Boswell's Life of Johnson," in New Light on Boswell, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1991), pp. 194-206.
Eithne Henson, "The Fictions of Romantick Chivalry": Samuel Johnson and Romance (Rutherford, N.J.: Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press, 1992). Pp. 255. Reviews:
Paul Dean, English Studies, 74:6 (Dec. 1993), 549-58;
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 48-51 (with another work);
A. F. T. Lurcock, N&Q, 41:3 (Sept. 1994), 396-97;
D. L. Patey, Choice, 30:6 (Feb. 1993), 960.
Eithne Henson, "Johnson and the Condition of Women," in The Cambridge Companion to Samuel Johnson, ed. Greg Clingham (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1997), pp. 67-84.
Eithne Henson, "Lost for Words," The Independent, 27 June 1999, p. 31. Brief letter to the Editor, challenging A. N. Wilson's claim that Johnson dismissed monastic retirement.
Neil Hertz, "Dr. Johnson's Forgetfulness, Descartes' Piece of Wax," Eighteenth-Century Life, 16:3 (Nov. 1992), 167-81.
Regina Hewitt, "Time in Rasselas: Johnson's Use of Locke's Concept," Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 19 (1989), 267-76.
Alison Hickey, "'Extensive Views' in Johnson's Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland," SEL, 32:3 (Summer 1992), 537-53.
Bronwen Hickman, "The Women in Johnson's World," Johnson Society of Australia Papers, 2 (1997), 7-15.
Nelson Hilton, Lexis Complexes (Athens: Univ. of Georgia Press, 1995), chapter 3 ("Restless Wrestling: Johnson's Rasselas"), pp. 38-55.
Charles H. Hinnant, Samuel Johnson: An Analysis (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1988). Pp. ix + 148. Reviews:
Lionel Basney, ELN, 27:4 (1990), 74-76;
Isobel Grundy, The New Rambler, D:4 (1988-89), 62-63;
Lawrence Lipking, Biography, 12 (1989), 251-53;
John H. Middendorf, The Johnsonian News Letter, 48:1-2 (March-June 1988), 1;
M. S. Wagoner, Choice, 26:1 (Sept. 1988), 135;
T. F. Wharton, South Atlantic Review, 55:1 (Jan. 1990), 142-44.
Charles H. Hinnant, ed., Johnson and Gender: Special Issue of South Central Review, 9:4 (Winter 1992). Reviews:
Marie E. McAllister, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 6 (1994), 394-404.
Charles H. Hinnant, "Johnson and the Limits of Biography: Teaching the Life of Savage," in Approaches to Teaching the Works of Samuel Johnson, ed. David R. Anderson and Gwin J. Kolb (New York: MLA, 1993), pp. 107-13.
Charles H. Hinnant, "Steel for the Mind": Samuel Johnson and Critical Discourse (Newark: Univ. of Delaware Press, 1994). Pp. xi + 251. Reviews:
Lionel Basney, "Johnson's Theories and Ours," Sewanee Review, 105:2 (Spring 1997), 66-67; Greg Clingham, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 480-85;
Brian Hanley, The New Rambler, D:10 (1994-95), 70-71;
Jack Lynch, Choice, 31:10 (June 1994), 1578;
Edward Tomarken, Papers on Language & Literature, 32:2 (Spring 1996), 217-23;
Thomas Woodman, British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 19:1 (Spring 1996), 113-14 (with another work).
Richard Holmes, Dr. Johnson and Mr. Savage (New York: Pantheon Books, 1993). Pp. xii + 260. Reviews:
Peter Ackroyd, Los Angeles Times, 28 Aug. 1994, p. 3;
J. T. Barbarese, "Samuel Johnson's Odd Friendship," Philadelphia Inquirer, 4 Sept. 1994, p. 3;
Janet Barron, New Statesman & Society, 6 (22 Oct. 1993), 37;
Anne Barton, New York Review of Books, 16 Feb. 1995, pp. 6-8;
John Bayley, London Review of Books, 15:21 (1993), 7-8;
Booklist, 90 (July 1994), 1916;
Charles A. Brady, "Retelling Samuel Johnson's Devil of a Friendship," The Buffalo News, 9 Oct. 1994, p. 6;
Gale E. Christianson, Albion, 27:1 (1995), 131-33;
Matthew M. Davis, Modern Age, 39:1 (Winter 1997), 73-76;
David Ellis, Cambridge Quarterly, 23:4 (1994), 384-88;
Laurel Graeber, The New York Times, 26 May 1996, section 7, p. 20;
James Gray, The Age of Johnson: A Scholarly Annual, 7 (1996), 485-95;
The Independent, 3 Oct. 1993, p. 36;
David Isaacson, The Jerusalem Post Magazine, 10 Feb. 1996, p. 20;
Paul Johnson, The Spectator, 271 (30 Oct. 1993), pp. 32-33;
Joseph F. Keppler, The Seattle Times, 23 Oct. 1994, p. M2;
Rhoda Koenig, Vogue, 184:8 (Aug. 1994), 158-59;
John L. Mahoney, Southern Humanities Review, 30:2 (Spring 1996), 181-83;
David Nokes, TLS, 29 Oct. 1993, pp. 11-12;
Phoebe Pettingell, The New Leader, 77:10 (10 Oct. 1994), 14;
Publishers Weekly, 241:31 (1 Aug. 1994), 69;
Anthony Quinn, The Independent, 15 Jan. 1994, p. 29;
Pat Rogers, New York Times Book Review, 4 Sept. 1994, p. 14;
Peter Schwendener, The American Scholar, 64:3 (Summer 1995), 467-70;
Robert Taylor, The Boston Globe, 11 Sept. 1994, p. A19;
Alexander Theroux, Chicago Tribune, 30 Oct. 1994, p. 4;
Edward T. Wheeler, Commonweal, 121:19 (4 Nov. 1994), 32.
Anthea Hopkins, "The Dangerous Distinction of Authorship," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 21-24.
A. D. Horgan, Johnson on Language: An Introduction (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1994). Pp. ix + 226. Reviews:
Jack Lynch, Choice, 32 (April 1995), 4345;
Anne McDermott, Review of English Studies, 47 (1997), 593-94.
Gloria Horsley-Meacham, "The Johnsonian Jest in 'Benito Cereno,'" American Notes & Queries, 6:1 (Jan. 1993), 17-18.
Philip Howard, "Dr. Johnson: The Perfect Professional Fleet Street Hack," The New Rambler, D:8 (1992-93), 18-21.
Philip Howard, "Don't Take the Low Road," The Times, 23 Oct. 1993, Vision, p. 4. Review of BBC2's Tour of the Western Isles with Coltrane and Sessions.
Philip Howard, "In the Great Linguistic Debate, Both Sides Claim Dr. Johnson, and Rightly So," The Times, 9 Feb. 1996, Features.
N. J. Hudson, "Studies in the Moral and Religious Thought of Johnson," D.Phil. Dissertation, University of Oxford, 1984.
N. J. Hudson, "Samuel Johnson and the Literature of Common Life," British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 11:1 (Spring 1988), 39-50.
Nicholas Hudson, Samuel Johnson and Eighteenth-Century
That is really helpful. It provided me a number of ideas and I'll be placing them on my web site eventually. I'm bookmarking your blog and I'll be back. Thanks again!
ReplyDeletearomatherapy