b. Gulliver’s Travels

  1. Barker, Rosalind Allen. "A Case of Religious Interpretation in Part III of Gulliver’s Travels." In A Festschrift for Professor Marguerite Roberts. Ed. Penninger. Richmond, Virginia: U of Richmond P, 1976. 101-113.
  2. Barnett, Louise K. "Deconstructing Gulliver’s Travels: Modern Readers and the Problematic of Genre". The Genres of Gulliver’s Travels. Ed. Frederik N. Smith. Newark: U of Delaware P, 1992. 230-246.
  3. Barroll, J. Leeds. "Gulliver and the Struldbruggs." PMLA (1958): 43-50.
  4. Bellamy, Liz. Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels. New York and London: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1992. ix + 133 pp.
  5. Bony, Alain. Discours et Vérité dans Les Voyages de Gulliver de Jonathan Swift. Lyon : Presses Universitaires de Lyon, 2002. 252 pp.
  6. Boucé, Paul-Gabriel. "Death in Gulliver’s Travels: The Struldbruggs Revisited." In Swift: The Enigmatic Dean. Festschrift for Hermann Josef Real. Eds. Freiburg, Löffler and Zach. Tübingen: Stauffenburg, 1998. 1-13.
  7. Brady, Frank, ed. Twentieth-Century Interpretations of Gulliver’s Travels: A Collection of Critical Essays. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1968. x +118 pp.
  8. Carnochan, W. B. Lemuel Gulliver’s Mirror for Man. Berkeley and Los Angeles: U of California P, 1968. viii + 226.
  9. Castle, Terry J. "Why the Houyhnhnms Don’t Write: Swift, Satire, and the Fear of the Text." Essays in Literature 7 (1980): 31-44.
  10. Crane, Ronald S. "The Houyhnhnms, the Yahoos, and the History of Ideas." In Reason and the Imagination: Study in the History of Ideas, 1600-1800. Ed. Joseph A. Mazzeo. New York and London: Columbia University Press, 1962. 231-253.
  11. Crane, Ronald S. "The Rationale of the Fourth Voyage." In Gulliver’s Travels: An Annotated Text with Critical Essays. Ed. Robert Arthur Greenberg. New York: Norton, 1961. 331-338.
  12. Cunningham, John. "Perversions of the Eucharist in Gulliver’s Travels." Christianity and Literature 40 (Summer 1991): 345-364.
  13. Ehrenpreis, Irvin. "The Meaning of Gulliver’s Last Voyage." Review of English Literature 3 (1962): 18-38.
  14. Elliott, Robert C. "Gulliver as Literary Artist." English Literary History 19 (1952): 49‑63.
  15. Emprin, Ginette. "Appearance and Reality in Gulliver’s Travels." Etudes Irlandaises 15.1 (1990): 37-44.
  16. Erskine-Hill, Howard. Jonathan Swift: Gulliver’s Travels. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1993. ix + 110 pp.
  17. Fitzgerald, Robert P. "The Structure of Gulliver’s Travels." Studies in Philology 51 (1974): 247-263.
  18. Foster, Milton P. A Casebook on Gulliver among the Houyhnhnms. New York: Thomas Y. Cromwell Company, 1961. xiii + 319 pp.
  19. Fox, Christopher. "The Myth of Narcissus in Gulliver’s Travels." Eighteenth Century Studies 20 (Fall 1986): 17-33.
  20. Freedman, William. "Swift’s Struldbruggs, Progress, and the Analogy of History." Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 35 (Summer 1995): 457-472.
  21. Frye, Roland Mushat. "Swift’s Yahoo and the Christian Symbols for Sin." Journal of the History of Ideas 15 (1954): 201-217.
  22. Fussell, Paul. "The Frailty of Lemuel Gulliver." In Essays in Literary History presented to J. Milton French. Eds. Kirk and Main. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1960. 113-125.
  23. Goldberg, Julia. "Houyhnhnm Subtext: Moral Conclusions and Linguistical Manipulation in Gulliver’s Travels." 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era 4 (1998): 269-284.
  24. Hammond, Brean S. Gulliver’s Travels. Milton Keynes and Philadelphia: Open UP, 1988. 129 pp.
  25. Hinnant, Charles H. Purity and Defilement in Gulliver’s Travels. London: Macmillan, 1987. 128 pp.
  26. Holly, Grant. "Travel and Translation: Textuality in Gulliver’s Travels." Criticism 21 (1979): 134-152.
  27. Kallich, Martin. The Other End of the Egg: Religious Satire in Gulliver’s Travels. Conference on British Studies. Bridgeport, Conn.: The U of Bridgeport, 1970. ix + 119 pp.
  28. Kelly, Ann Cline. "After Eden: Gulliver’s (Linguistic) Travels." English Literary History 45 (1978): 33-54.
  29. Lamoine, Georges. "Notes on Religion in Gulliver’s Travels." Annales de l’Université de Toulouse‑Le Mirail 9.1 (1973): 23-33.
  30. Lapraz-Severino, Françoise. Relativité et Communication dans Les Voyages de Gulliver. Lille: ANRT/diffusion Didier-Erudition, 1984. 527 pp.
  31. Lock, F. P. The Politics of Gulliver’s Travels. Oxford, Clarendon Press: 1980. 156 pp.
  32. McManmon, John J. "The Problem of a Religious Interpretation of Gulliver’s Fourth Voyage." Journal of the History of Ideas 27.1 (1966): 59-72.
  33. McWhir, Anne. "‘Animal Religiosum’ and the Witches in ‘A Voyage to the Houyhnhnms’." English Studies in Canada 12.14 (December 1986): 375-386.
  34. Monk, Samuel Holt. "The Pride of Lemuel Gulliver". Eighteenth-Century Literature: Modern Essays in Criticism. Ed. James Clifford. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1959. 112-129.
  35. Philmus, Robert A. "Swift and the Question of Allegory: the Case of Gulliver’s Travels." ESC 18. 2 (June 1992): 157-179.
  36. Probyn, Clive T. Gulliver’s Travels. London: Penguin, 1989. 114 pp.
  37. Quintana, Ricardo. "Gulliver’s Travels: The Satiric Intent and Execution." Jonathan Swift 1667-1967: A Dublin Tercentenary Tribute. Eds. Roger McHugh and Philip Edwards. Dublin: Dolmen Press, 1967. 78-93.
  38. Rawson, Claude. Gulliver and the Gentle Reader. Studies in Swift and Our Time. London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1973. x + 190 pp.
  39. Reilly, Patrick. "Gulliver’s Travels: Looking into the Pool." The Literature of Guilt: From Gulliver to Golding. Ed. Patrick Reilly. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1988. 15-45.
  40. Rodino, Richard H. "‘Splendide Mendax’: Authors, Characters, and Readers in Gulliver’s Travels." PMLA 106.5 (1991): 1054-1070.
  41. Smith, Frederik N. "The Danger of Reading Swift: The Double Binds of Gulliver’s Travels." Studies in the Literary Imagination 17.1 (1984): 35-47.
  42. Smith, Frederik N. "Vexing Voices: The Telling of Gulliver’s Story." Papers on Language and Literature 21. 4 (1985): 383-398.
  43. Starkman, Miriam K. "Satirical Onomastics: Lemuel Gulliver and King Solomon." Philological Quarterly 60.1 (Winter 1981): 41-52.
  44. Stone, Edward. "Swift and the Horses: Misanthropy or Comedy." Modern Language Quarterly 10 (1949): 367-376.
  45. Sutherland, John. H. "A Reconsideration of Gulliver’s Third Voyage." Studies in Philology 14 (1957): 45-52.
  46. Todd, Dennis. "Laputa, the Whore of Babylon, and the Idols of Science " Studies in Philology 75 (1978): 93-120.
  47. Traugott, John. "A Voyage to Nowhere With Thomas More and Jonathan Swift: Utopia and The Voyage to the Houyhnhnms." Sewanee Review 69 (1961): 534-565.
  48. Traugott, John. "Swift’s Allegory: the Yahoo and the Man of Mode." University of Toronto Quarterly 23 (1963): 1-18.
  49. Wedel, T. O. "On the Philosophical Background of Gulliver’s Travels." Studies in Philology 23 (1926): 434-450.
  50. Williams, Kathleen. "Gulliver’s Voyage to the Houyhnhnms." English Literature and History 18 (1951): 257-286.
  51. Winton, Calhoun. "Conversion on the Road to Houyhnhnmland." Sewanee Review 48 (1960): 20-33.