4. Autres aspects de l’œuvre de Swift

  1. Beaumont, Charles Allen. Swift’s Classical Rhetoric. University of Georgia Monographs N° 8. U. of Georgia P., 1961. vii + 158 pp.
  2. Berwick, Donald M. The Reputation of Jonathan Swift, 1781-1882. Philadelphia: Princeton University, 1941. 170 pp.
  3. Boyle, Frank T. "Old Poetry and New Science: Swift, Cowley, and Modernity." 1650‑1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 4 (1998): 247‑268.
  4. Boyle, Frank T. "Profane and Debauched Deist: Swift in the Contemporary Response to A Tale of a Tub." Eighteenth Century Ireland 3 (1988): 24-38.
  5. Brantley, Will. "Reading Swift as a Modernist: A Polemical Investigation." Essays in Literature 19.1 (Spring 1992): 20-35.
  6. Byrd, Max. "Sterne and Swift: Augustan Continuities." Johnson and His Age. Ed. James Engell. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP, 1989. 509-530.
  7. Carnochan, W.B. Lemuel Gulliver’s Mirror for Man. Berkeley: U of California P, 1968. viii + 226 pp.
  8. Connery, Brian A. "Self-Representation, Authority, and the Fear of Madness in the Works of Swift." Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 20 (1990): 165-182.
  9. Cook, Richard I. "‘Mr. Examiner’ and ‘Mr. Review’: The Tory Apologetics of Swift and Defoe." Huntington Library Quarterly 29. 2 (1966): 127-146.
  10. Cook, Richard I. "Swift as a Tory Rhetorician." Texas Studies in Literature and Language 41 (1962): 72-86.
  11. Croghan, M. J. "Savage Indignation: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Language and Semiotics in Jonathan Swift." Swift Studies 5 (1990): 11-37.
  12. Dargan, H. M. "The Nature of Swift’s allegory. " Studies in Philology 13 (1916): 100‑115.
  13. Davis, Herbert. "The Conciseness of Swift." Essays on the Eighteenth Century Presented to David Nichol Smith. Ed. J. Sutherland and F. P. Wilson. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1945. 15-32.
  14. Downie, J. A. Jonathan Swift, Political Writer. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984. xvi + 391 pp.
  15. Ehrenpreis, Irvin. "Swift and the Comedy of Evil." In The World of Jonathan Swift. Ed. Brian Vickers. Oxford: Blackwell, 1968. 213‑219.
  16. Fabricant, Carole. "Speaking for the Irish Nation: The Drapier, the Bishop, and the Problems of Colonial Representation." English Literature and History 66 (Summer 1999): 337-372.
  17. Ferguson, Oliver W. Jonathan Swift and Ireland. Urbana: U of Illinois P, 1962. viii + 277 pp.
  18. Flynn, Carol H. The Body in Swift and Defoe. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1990. vii + 231 pp.
  19. Francus, Marilyn. The Converting Imagination: Linguistic Theory and Swift’s Satiric Prose. Carbondale, Edwardsville: Southern Illinois UP, 1994. xviii + 260 pp.
  20. Gallet, René. "Swift et la "sagesse de ce monde"." BSÉAA 55 (novembre 2002). 111‑131.
  21. Goldgar, B. A. The Curse of Party: Swift’s Relations with Addison and Steele. Lincoln: U of Nebraska P, 1961. vii + 198 pp.
  22. Higgins, Ian. Swift’s Politics. A Study in Disaffection. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1994. 232 pp.
  23. Jeffares, A. Norman, ed. Swift: Modern Judgements. London: Aurora, 1970. 270 pp.
  24. Jones, Myrddin. "‘Further Thoughts on Religion’: Swift’s Relationships to Filmer and Locke." Review of English Studies 9 (1958): 284-286.
  25. Kelly, Ann Cline. Swift and the English Language. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 1988. xi + 169 pp.
  26. Korshin, Paul J. "Johnson and Swift: A Study in the Genesis of Literary Opinion." Philological Quarterly 48 (1969): 464-478.
  27. Korshin, Paul J. "The Earl of Orrery and Swift’s Early Reputation." Harvard Library Bulletin 16 (1968): 167-177.
  28. Lock, F. P. Swift’s Tory Politics. London: Duckworth, 1983. viii + 189 pp.
  29. Mahony, Robert. Jonathan Swift: The Irish Identity. London, New Haven: Yale UP, 1995. xviii + 222 pp.
  30. Mahony, Robert. "The Irish Colonial Experience and Swift’s Rhetoric of Perception in the 1720s." Eighteenth-Century Life 22 (1998): 63-75.
  31. Mahony, Robert. "Review Essay – Retrieving Eighteenth-Century Ireland." Eighteenth-Century Life 23 (1999): 98-112.
  32. Mueller, Judith Claire. The Reading Contract in Jonathan Swift’s Political and Religious Satire. Unpub. PhD. Binghamton: State University of New York, 1991. vi + 199 pp.
  33. New, Melvyn. "Swift and Sterne: Two Tales, Several Sermons, and a Relationship Revisited." In Critical Essays on Jonathan Swift. Ed. Frank Palmeri. New York: Macmillan, 1993. 164-186.
  34. New, Melvyn. "Sterne and Swift, Sermons and Satire." Modern Language Quarterly 30 (1969): 198-211.
  35. Nokes, David. "Swift and the Beggars." Essays in Criticism 26 (1976).
  36. Nokes, David. "The Radical Conservatism of Swift’s Irish Pamphlets." British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies 7 (1984): 169-176.
  37. Parnell, J. T. "Swift, Sterne, and the Skeptical Tradition." Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture: American Society for Eighteenth Century Studies 23 (1994): 221-242.
  38. Philmus, Robert M. "Swift and the Question of Allegory: The Case of Gulliver’s Travels." English Studies in Canada 18 ( June 1992): 157-179.
  39. Pierre, Gerald J. "Sir William Temple: Friend and Teacher of Jonathan Swift." Wisconsin Studies in Literature 2 (1965): 28-36.
  40. Pons, Emile. "Swift et Pascal." Les Langues Modernes 45 (1951): 135-152.
  41. Price, Martin. Swift’s Rhetorical Art. A Study in Structure and Meaning. New Haven: Yale UP, 1953. 117 pp.
  42. Price, Martin. "Swift in the Interpreter’s House." Satire in the Eighteenth Century. Ed. J. D. Browning. New York: Garland, 1983. 100-115.
  43. Probyn, Clive T. The Art of Jonathan Swift. Plymouth, London: Vision Press, 1978. 215 pp.
  44. Probyn, Clive T. "Swift and Typographic Man: Foul Papers, Modern Criticism, and Irish Dissenters." In Reading Swift: Papers from The Second Münster Symposium on Swift. Eds. Richard H. Rodino & Hermann J. Real. Munich: Wilhelm Fink Verlag, 1993. 25-43.
  45. Quinlan, Maurice J. "Swift’s Use of Literalization as a Rhetorical Device." PMLA 82 (1967): 516-521.
  46. Rawson, Claude. "Order and Cruelty: A Reading of Swift (with some Comments on Pope and Johnson)." Essays in Criticism 20.1 (1970): 24-56.
  47. Real, Hermann Josef. "Swift after Ehrenpreis: Is there anything Left to Learn?" Anglistik 10.1 (1999): 97-103.
  48. Real, Hermann J. and Heinz J. Vienken. "Psychoanalytic Criticism and Swift: the History of a Failure." Eighteenth Century Ireland 1 (1986): 127‑141.
  49. Rembert, James A. W. Swift and the Dialectical Tradition. New York: Macmillan, 1988. xiii + 266 pp.
  50. Rodino, Richard H. "Varieties of Vexatious Experience in Swift and Others." Papers in Language and Literature 18 (1982): 325-347.
  51. Rogers, Pat. "Swift and the Idea of Authority." In The World of Jonathan Swift: Essays for the Tercentenary. Ed. Brian Vickers. Oxford: Blackwell, 1968. 25-37.
  52. Steele, Peter. "Swift and the Uses of Anger." Monash Swift Papers 1 (1988): 27‑40.
  53. Voigt, Milton. Swift and the Twentieth Century. Detroit: Wayne State UP, 1964. 205 pp.
  54. Williams, Kathleen. "Animal rationis Capax: A Study of Certain Aspects of Swift’s Imagery." English Literature and History 21 (1954): 193-207.
  55. Wyrick, Deborah Baker. Jonathan Swift and the Vested Word. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1988. xvii + 249 pp.
  56. Zimmerman, Everett. "Swift’s Scatological Poetry: A Praise of Folly." Modern Language Quarterly 48.2 (June 1987): 124-144.