This graduate seminar ran in the Spring of 2005.
POE AND HAWTHORNE
3300:645:801
Spring 2005
The University of Akron
Olin Hall 119A
5:20pm to 7:50pm
Dr. Jon Miller
363 Olin Hall
mjon at uakron edu; x5717
My office hours for Spring 2005 will be Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9:15 am to 11:15 am.
Course Description
This is a graduate seminar in the writing, biographies, historical context, and literary criticism of Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne. Minor assignments are coordinated to help you complete the main assignment, a coherent and scholarly twelve- to fifteen-page paper that has been sculpted from a longer, eighteen- to twenty-five-page paper.
Books
Poe, Edgar Allan. The Selected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe. Norton Critical Edition. New York: Norton, 2004. ISBN 0393972852.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. Blithedale Romance: An Authoritative Text, Backgrounds and Sources, Criticism. New York: Norton, 1978. ISBN 0393091503.
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. Selected Tales and Sketches. Penguin Classics. New York: Penguin Books, ISBN 014039057X.
Reynolds, Larry J. A Historical Guide to Nathaniel Hawthorne. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0195124146.
Kennedy, J. Gerald. A Historical Guide to Edgar Allan Poe. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0195121503.
Reading Assignments
See reading schedule.
Short Papers
One-to-two page single-spaced papers are due each week from week three to week seven. These papers may be on discussion questions I will circulate weekly. Or they may be on topics of your choice. Regardless, in these papers you should present an interpretation of a work or a specific passage in one our works. And this argument should be supported by close reading, i.e., by the use of specific quotations from the text. Select papers may be circulated each week as examples for discussion. If I choose to copy and circulate a paper, however, I will remove the author's name from it. This will spare the author from the temptations of Pridefulness and Gloating.
Bibliographic Essay
Imitating the two bibliographic essays in our Historical Guides, you will compose a brief bibliographic essay that summarizes and interprets at least three scholarly articles, books, or combination of the two. They may be articles on our reading schedule. Or you can find your own. You will be free to devise your own theme for the essay. This is due after you have submitted the rough draft but before you have submitted the final draft.
Research Paper – First Draft
The first draft of the paper should be a long, polished, more-or-less finished version that runs between fifteen and twenty-five pages of twelve-point Courier with regular one-inch margins. You are expected to write literary criticism. In other words, your paper should focus mainly on the interpretation of one or more works of creative literature.
Final Paper
At the end of the course, you'll turn in a final version of your paper that is about twelve pages in double-spaced 12-point Courier. I request this specific length since, for most authors, it translates into a fifteen- to twenty-minute presentation.
Attendance
You can miss two classes without penalty. If you miss four classes, you could fail the course. Please do not be late to class.
Grading
Short papers 25%; draft on due date 5%; bibliographic essay 10%; final research paper 60%.
Reading Schedule
Legend
EAP = Poe, Edgar Allan. The Selected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe. Norton Critical Edition. New York: Norton, 2004. ISBN 0393972852.
BR = Hawthorne, Nathaniel. Blithedale Romance: An Authoritative Text, Backgrounds and Sources, Criticism. New York: Norton, 1978. ISBN 0393091503.
NHTS = Hawthorne, Nathaniel. Selected Tales and Sketches. Penguin Classics. New York: Penguin Books, ISBN 014039057X.
HGNH = Reynolds, Larry J. A Historical Guide to Nathaniel Hawthorne. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0195124146.
HGEAP = Kennedy, J. Gerald. A Historical Guide to Edgar Allan Poe. Oxford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0195121503.
Thursday, January 20 (1)
–Syllabus
–G.R. Thompson, Transcendentalism and Alternative Romanticism (criticism), EAP (2004), 717 to 720.
–Friedrich Schlegel, Fragments (journal writing), EAP (1798), 727 to 730.
–Friedrich Schlegel, from Dialogue on Poetry (criticism), EAP (1800), 731 to 732.
Thursday, January 27 (2)
–Jean Paul Friedrich Richter, from Preschool for Aesthetics (criticism), EAP (1804), 737 to 741.
–August Wilhem Schlegel, Dramatic Lectures (criticism), EAP (1815), 732 to 737.
–Johann G. Spurzheim, The Physiognomical System of Drs. Gall and Spurzheim (essay), EAP (1815), 742 to 745.
–Anonymous, Extracts from Gosschen's Diary, with Thompson's introduction (tale/sketch), EAP (1818), 754 to 759.
–Anonymous, The Buried Alive (tale/sketch), EAP (1821), 759 to 762.
–William Maginn, The Man in the Bell (tale/sketch), EAP (1821), 762 to 766.
–J. Gerald Kennedy, Introduction: Poe in Our time (introduction), HGEAP (2001), 3 to 18.
–J. Gerald Kennedy, Edgar Allan Poe, 1809-1849: A Brief Biography (bio), HGEAP (2001), 19 to 62.
–G.R. Thompson, Edgar Allan Poe: An American Life (bio), EAP (2004), xiii to xlviii.
–J. Gerald Kennedy, Illustrated Chronology (bio), HGEAP (2001), 189 to 208.
–Scott Peeples, Bibliographical Essay: Major Editions and Landmarks of Poe Scholarship (bibliography), HGEAP (2001), 209 to 231.
Thursday, February 3 (3)
Short paper due.
–G.R. Thompson, Poems (introduction), EAP (2004), 3 to 8.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Tamerlane (poem), EAP (1827), 8 to 14.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Dreams (poem), EAP (1827), 15 to 15.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Spirits of the Dead (poem), EAP (1827), 16 to 16.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Evening Star (poem), EAP (1827), 17 to 17.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Imitation (poem), EAP (1827), 17 to 17.
–Edgar Allan Poe, [Stanzas] (poem), EAP (1827), 18 to 18.
–Edgar Allan Poe, A Dream (poem), EAP (1827), 19 to 19.
–Edgar Allan Poe, [The Happiest Day] (poem), EAP (1827), 20 to 19.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Lake--To----- (poem), EAP (1827), 20 to 21.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Sonnet--To Science (poem), EAP (1829), 21 to 21.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Al Aaraaf (poem), EAP (1829), 22 to 41.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Fairy-Land version 1 (poem), EAP (1829), 43 to 44.
–Edgar Allan Poe, [Alone] (poem), EAP (1829), 46 to 46.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To John Allan (letter), EAP (1829), 587 to 587.
–Michael J. Colacurcio, Introduction (introduction), NHTS (1987), vii to xxxv.
–Larry J. Reynolds, Introduction (introduction), HGNH (2001), 3 to 12.
–Brenda Wineapple, Nathaniel Hawthorne, 1804-1864: A Brief Biography (bio), HGNH (2001), 13 to 48.
–Larry J. Reynolds, Illustrated Chronology (bio), HGNH (2001), 165 to 182.
Thursday, February 10 (4)
Short paper due.
–Leland S. Person, Bibliographical Essay: Hawthorne and History (bibliography), HGNH (2001), 183 to 209.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Hollow of the Three Hills (tale/sketch), NHTS (1830), 1 to 6.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Sir William Phips (tale/sketch), NHTS (1830), 7 to 13.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Mrs. Hutchinson (tale/sketch), NHTS (1830), 14 to 21.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Introduction (poem), EAP (1831), 42 to 42.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Fairy-Land version 2 (poem), EAP (1831), 45 to 45.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Helen (poem), EAP (1831), 47 to 47.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Israfel (poem), EAP (1831), 48 to 48.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Valley of Unrest (poem), EAP (1831), 51 to 51.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The City in the Sea (poem), EAP (1831), 51 to 52.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Letter to B--- [Preface to Poems] (essay), EAP (1831), 588 to 593.
–G.R. Thompson, Tales and Sketches (introduction), EAP (2004), 77 to 80.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Metzengerstein (tale/sketch), EAP (1832), 81 to 89.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Loss of Breath (tale/sketch), EAP (1832), 89 to 106.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Wives of the Dead (tale/sketch), NHTS (1832), 22 to 28.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, My Kinsman, Major Molineux (tale/sketch), NHTS (1832), 29 to 50.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Roger Malvin's Burial (tale/sketch), NHTS (1832), 51 to 73.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Coliseum (poem), EAP (1833), 53 to 55.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Ms. Found in a Bottle (tale/sketch), EAP (1833), 106 to 115.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Joseph and Edwin Buckingham (letter), EAP (1833), 594 to 594.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Assignation (tale/sketch), EAP (1834), 116 to 128.
Thursday, February 17 (5)
Short paper due.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Passages from a Relinquished Work (tale/sketch), NHTS (1834), 74 to 89.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Mr. Higginbotham's Catastrophe (tale/sketch), NHTS (1834), 90 to 103.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Folio Club (essay), EAP (1834), 595 to 596.
–James E. Heath, Southern Literature, with Thompson's introduction (criticism), EAP (1834), 767 to 771.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Some Passages in the Life of a Lion (tale/sketch), EAP (1835), 128 to 133.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Shadow--A Parable (tale/sketch), EAP (1835), 134 to 136.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Berenice (tale/sketch), EAP (1835), 140 to 147.
–Edgar Allan Poe, King Pest (tale/sketch), EAP (1835), 148 to 159.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Haunted Mind (tale/sketch), NHTS (1835), 104 to 109.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Alice Doane's Appeal (tale/sketch), NHTS (1835), 110 to 123.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Gray Champion (tale/sketch), NHTS (1835), 124 to 132.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Young Goodman Brown (tale/sketch), NHTS (1835), 133 to 148.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Wakefield (tale/sketch), NHTS (1835), 149 to 158.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Notch of the White Mountains (tale/sketch), NHTS (1835), 159 to 161.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Ambitious Guest (tale/sketch), NHTS (1835), 162 to 171.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Thomas W. White (letter), EAP (1835), 596 to 598.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Theodore S. Fay (review), EAP (1835), 598 to 600.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The May-Pole of Merry Mount (tale/sketch), NHTS (1836), 172 to 184.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Minister's Black Veil (tale/sketch), NHTS (1836), 185 to 199.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Morris Mattson (review), EAP (1836), 601 to 602.
–John P. Kennedy, To Poe (letter), EAP (1836), 602 to 603.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To John P. Kennedy (letter), EAP (1836), 603 to 603.
–J.K. Paulding, To T.W. White (letter), EAP (1836), 603 to 604.
Thursday, February 24 (6)
Short paper due.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Joseph Rodman Drake-Fitz-Greene Halleck (review), EAP (1836), 604 to 611.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Harrison Hall (letter), EAP (1836), 611 to 612.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Robert M. Bird (review), EAP (1836), 612 to 613.
–N.B. Tucker, Slavery (essay), EAP (1836), 772 to 778.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To N.B. Tucker (letter), EAP (1836), 778 to 778.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Sunday at Home (tale/sketch), NHTS (1837), 200 to 207.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Man of Adamant (tale/sketch), NHTS (1837), 208 to 216.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Legends of the Province-House (tale/sketch), NHTS (1837), 232 to 245.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Silence.--A Fable (tale/sketch), EAP (1838), 136 to 140.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Ligeia (tale/sketch), EAP (1838), 159 to 173.
–Edgar Allan Poe, How to Write a Blackwood Article: A Predicament (tale/sketch), EAP (1838), 173 to 190.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym (tale/sketch), EAP (1838), 429 to 563.
Thursday, March 3 (7)
Short paper due.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Endicott and the Red Cross (tale/sketch), NHTS (1838), 217 to 224.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Night Sketches (tale/sketch), NHTS (1838), 225 to 231.
–Edgar Allan Poe, A Dream within a Dream (poem), EAP (1839), 70 to 70.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Man That Was Used Up (tale/sketch), EAP (1839), 190 to 199.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Fall of the House of Usher (tale/sketch), EAP (1839), 199 to 216.
–Edgar Allan Poe, William Wilson (tale/sketch), EAP (1839), 216 to 232.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Baron de la Motte Fouque (review), EAP (1839), 613 to 616.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Philip P. Cooke (letter), EAP (1839), 616 to 617.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Sonnet--Silence (poem), EAP (1840), 55 to 55.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Man of the Crowd (tale/sketch), EAP (1840), 232 to 239.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Thomas Moore (review), EAP (1840), 617 to 620.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Preface to Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque (essay), EAP (1840), 620 to 621.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Prospectus of The Penn Magazine (prospectus), EAP (1840), 621 to 623.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To William E. Burton (letter), EAP (1840), 623 to 623.
–Thomas C. Upham, from Outlines of Imperfection and Disordered Action (essay), EAP (1840), 748 to 753.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Joseph Evans Snodgrass (letter), EAP (1840), 784 to 784.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Sleeper (poem), EAP (1841), 49 to 50.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Murders in the Rue Morgue (tale/sketch), EAP (1841), 239 to 266.
–Edgar Allan Poe, A Descent into the Maelstrom (tale/sketch), EAP (1841), 266 to 279.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Colloquy of Monos and Una (tale/sketch), EAP (1841), 279 to 286.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Never Bet the Devil Your Head (tale/sketch), EAP (1841), 286 to 295.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, From His Letters and Journals (journal writing), BR (1841), 231 to 240.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, From His Letters and Journals (journal writing), BR (1841), 242 to 244.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Edward Lytton Bulwer (review), EAP (1841), 624 to 626.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Lambert A. Wilmer (review), EAP (1841), 626 to 632.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Oval Portrait (tale/sketch), EAP (1842), 295 to 299.
Thursday, March 10 (8)
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Masque of the Red Death (tale/sketch), EAP (1842), 299 to 304.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Pit and the Pendulum (tale/sketch), EAP (1842), 304 to 316.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Exordium to Critical Notices (essay), EAP (1842), 632 to 636.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (review), EAP (1842), 636 to 643.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne part 1 (review), EAP (1842), 643 to 644.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne part 2 (review), EAP (1842), 645 to 650.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Joseph Evans Snodgrass (letter), EAP (1842), 650 to 651.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Tell-Tale Heart (tale/sketch), EAP (1843), 316 to 321.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Gold-Bug (tale/sketch), EAP (1843), 321 to 348.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Black Cat (tale/sketch), EAP (1843), 348 to 355.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Hall of Fantasy (tale/sketch), NHTS (1843), 246 to 258.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Birth-mark (tale/sketch), NHTS (1843), 259 to 278.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Egotism; or, The Bosom-Serpent (tale/sketch), NHTS (1843), 279 to 294.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Celestial Rail-road (tale/sketch), NHTS (1843), 316 to 335.
–Ralph Waldo Emerson, From His Journals (journal writing), BR (1843), 241 to 241.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Dream-Land (poem), EAP (1844), 56 to 57.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Premature Burial (tale/sketch), EAP (1844), 356 to 367.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Purloined Letter (tale/sketch), EAP (1844), 367 to 382.
Thursday, March 17 (9)
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Christmas Banquet (tale/sketch), NHTS (1844), 295 to 315.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Earth's Holocaust (tale/sketch), NHTS (1844), 336 to 357.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Artist of the Beautiful (tale/sketch), NHTS (1844), 358 to 385.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Rappaccini's Daughter (tale/sketch), NHTS (1844), 386 to 420.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To James R. Lowell (letter), EAP (1844), 651 to 653.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Marginalia (essay), EAP (1844), 653 to 656.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Raven (poem), EAP (1845), 57 to 61.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Some Words with a Mummy (tale/sketch), EAP (1845), 382 to 398.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Power of Words (tale/sketch), EAP (1845), 398 to 401.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Imp of the Perverse (tale/sketch), EAP (1845), 401 to 406.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar (tale/sketch), EAP (1845), 407 to 414.
–James Russell Lowell, from Our Contributors: Poe (biography), EAP (1845), 656 to 662.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (review), EAP (1845), 662 to 666.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Thomas Hood (review), EAP (1845), 667 to 670.
–Edgar Allan Poe?, [Review of Poe's Tales] (review), EAP (1845), 670 to 675.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Preface to The Raven and Other Poems (essay), EAP (1845), 675 to 675.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Cask of Amontillado (tale/sketch), EAP (1846), 415 to 421.
Thursday, March 24 (10)
Draft due.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Philosophy of Composition (criticism), EAP (1846), 675 to 684.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Philip P. Cooke (letter), EAP (1846), 684 to 685.
–Orson S. Fowler, Fowler's Practical Phrenology (essay), EAP (1846), 745 to 747.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Ulalume--A Ballad (poem), EAP (1847), 61 to 65.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne (review), EAP (1847), 685 to 693.
–Frederic Henry Hedge, On Immanuel Kant and German Transcendentalism (criticism), EAP (1847), 720 to 727.
–Edgar Allan Poe, To Helen (poem), EAP (1848), 68 to 70.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from Eureka: An Essay on the Material and Spiritual Universe (tale/sketch), EAP (1848), 564 to 584.
–Edgar Allan Poe, The Bells (poem), EAP (1849), 65 to 68.
–Edgar Allan Poe, For Annie (poem), EAP (1849), 71 to 74.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Eldorado (poem), EAP (1849), 74 to 74.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Annabel Lee (poem), EAP (1849), 75 to 76.
–Edgar Allan Poe, Hop-Frog; or, the Eight Chained Ourang-Outangs (tale/sketch), EAP (1849), 421 to 428.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from A Fable for the Critics (review), EAP (1849), 693 to 698.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, Ethan Brand (tale/sketch), NHTS (1850), 421 to 440.
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, from his American Notebooks (journal writing), BR (1850), 245 to 257.
–Edgar Allan Poe, from The Poetic Principle (criticism), EAP (1850), 698 to 704.
–Walter G. Bowen, pseud., A Reviewer Reviewed (hoax review), EAP (1850), 704 to 709.
–George R. Graham, from The Late Edgar Allan Poe (biography), EAP (1850), 710 to 712.
Thursday, March 31 (Spring Break)
Thursday, April 7 (11)
–Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Blithedale Romance (novel), BR (1852), 1 to 228.
Thursday, April 14 (12)
–various authors, Contemporary Reviews (reviews), BR (1852), 269 to 287.
–Charles Baudelaire, from Edgar Allan Poe (biography), EAP (1852), 712 to 715.
–Ralph Waldo Emerson, Historic Notes of Life and Letters in New England (essay), BR (1865), 258 to 268.
–Walt Whitman, from Edgar Poe's Significance (criticism), EAP (1880), 715 to 716.
–Philip Rahv, The Dark Lady of Salem (criticism), BR (1941), 337 to 340.
–Irving Howe, Hawthorne: Pastoral and Politics (criticism), BR (1957), 288 to 296.
–Roy R. Male, The Pastoral Wasteland (criticism), BR (1957), 297 to 301.
–Richard Wilbur, from The House of Poe (criticism), EAP (1959), 807 to 823.
–Robert Colin McLean, from Poetic Theory (criticism), EAP (1961), 798 to 807.
–A.N. Kaul, [Community and Society] (criticism), BR (1963), 302 to 310.
–Hyatt H. Waggoner, [Fire and Veils] (criticism), BR (1963), 368 to 372.
–James W. Gargano, The Question of Poe's Narrators (criticism), EAP (1963), 823 to 829.
–Barbara and Allan Lefcowitz, Some Rents in the Veil (criticism), BR (1966), 341 to 350.
–Frederick C. Crews, Turning the Affair into a Ballad (criticism), BR (1966), 373 to 379.
–Leo B. Levy, Hawthorne's "Voyage Through Chaos" (criticism), BR (1968), 311 to 323.
–Nina Baym, A Radical Reading (criticism), BR (1968), 351 to 367.
–Kelley Griffith, Jr., Form (criticism), BR (1968), 380 to 388.
–Joseph J. Moldenhauer, from Murder as a Fine Art (criticism), EAP (1968), 829 to 844.
Thursday, April 21 (13)
–Hans-Joachim Lang, A History of Ideas Approach (criticism), BR (1969), 324 to 336.
–Floyd Stovall, from Poe's Debt to Coleridge, with Thompson's introduction to this section (criticism), EAP (1969), 785 to 798.
–Louis Auchincloss, A Study of Form and Point of View (criticism), BR (1972), 389 to 394.
–Grace Farrell, The Quest of Arthur Gordon Pym (criticism), EAP (1972), 856 to 863.
–Liahna Armstrong, The Shadow's Shadow (criticism), EAP (1972), 863 to 873.
–Paul John Eakin, from Poe's Sense of an Ending (criticism), EAP (1973), 844 to 856.
–Kent Bales, The Allegory and the Radical Romantic Ethic (criticism), BR (1974), 407 to 414.
–Barton Levi St. Armand, from The "Mysteries" of Edgar Poe (criticism), EAP (1974), 873 to 883.
–James H. Justus, Hawthorne's Coverdale (criticism), BR (1975), 395 to 406.
–Joseph N. Riddel, from The "Crypt" of Edgar Poe (criticism), EAP (1979), 884 to 895.
–J. Gerald Kennedy, from Phantasms of Death in Poe's Fiction (criticism), EAP (1983), 896 to 904.
–J.V. Ridgely, The Authorship of the "Paulding-Drayton Review" (criticism), EAP (1992), 779 to 784.
–John T. Irwin, Detective Fiction as High Art: Lacan, Derrida, and Johnson on "The Purloined Letter" (criticism), EAP (1994), 941 to 952.
–John Carlos Rowe, from Antebellum Slavery and Modern Criticism (criticism), EAP (1997), 904 to 920.
–Terence Whalen, from Average Racism: Poe, Slavery, and the Wages of Literary Nationalism (criticism), EAP (1999), 921 to 941.
Thursday, April 28 (14)
–Terence Whalen, Poe and the American Publishing Industry (criticism), HGEAP (2001), 63 to 94.
–David Leverenz, Spanking the Master: Mind-Body Crossings in Poe 's Sensationalism (criticism), HGEAP (2001), 95 to 128.
–Leland S. Person, Poe and Nineteenth-Century Gender Constructions (criticism), HGEAP (2001), 129 to 166.
–Louis A. Renza, Poe and the Issue of American Privacy (criticism), HGEAP (2001), 167 to 188.
–Samuel Chase Coale, Mysteries of Mesmerism: Hawthorne's Haunted House (criticism), HGNH (2001), 49 to 78.
–Gillian Brown, Hawthorne and Children in the Nineteenth Century: Daughters, Flowers, Stories (criticism), HGNH (2001), 79 to 108.
–Rita K. Gollin, Hawthorne and the Visual Arts (criticism), HGNH (2001), 109 to 134.
–Jean Fagan Yellin, Hawthorne and the Slavery Question (criticism), HGNH (2001), 135 to 164.
Thursday, May 5 (15)
Final paper due.
Catch-up or make-up day.
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