[ Locke Bibliography ]

Chapter Ten: LITERATURE


1981-1990
1991-2000
2001-2005

2001

Certain good : power, plain English and modern poetry / David Irving Rosen. – Thesis (Ph.D.)—Yale University, 2000.
Unverified.

2002

Eighteenth-century fiction and the law of property / Wolfram Schmidgen. – Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2002.
See p. 42-92 passim.

2003

“A forgotten poem by Locke” / Caroline Hunt. // IN: Locke studies. – 3 (2003):195-199.
Includes a reprint of the poem; from Britannia rediviva (1660) [Locke #1A]
LS 4:6
“ ‘Unhackneyed thoughts and winged words’ : Arnold, Locke, and the similes of ‘Sohrab and Rustum’.” – See entry in Chapter 3.
“Leaving her father’s house : Astell, Locke, and Clarissa’s body politic” / Leslie Richardson. // IN: Studies in eighteenth-century culture. – 34 (2004):151-171.
“Defoe’s ‘A true relation,’ personal identity, and the Locke-Stillingfleet controversy.” – See entry in Chapter 3.

2005

“Locke, Haywood, and consent.” – See entry in Chapter 7.

2006

“The people things make : Locke’s An essay concerning human understanding and the properties of the self.” – See entry in Chapter 3.
“John Locke’s ideology of education and William Blake’s ‘Proverbs of Hell’.” – See entry in Chapter 4.
“Wordsworth amongst the Aristotelians.” – See entry in Chapter 3.
“Pamela’s textual production : naming and literary property in Richardson’s Pamela” / Songyen Lin. // IN: NTU studies in language and literature. – 15 (2006):23-30.
Unverified.
Power, plain English, and the rise of modern poetry / David Rosen. – New Haven : Yale University Press, c2006.
See 1, “Prologue : the secret reference of John Locke” (p. 15-32)
LS 6:10
“Winding up the clock : the conception and birth of Tristram Shandy” / Dirk Vanderbeke. // IN: Fashioning childhood in the eighteenth century : age and identity / edited by Anja Müller. – Aldershot, Hants. ; Burlington, Vt. : Ashgate Publishing, 2006. – (Ashgate studies in childhood, 1700 to the present). – p. 179-188.
LS 7:18

2007

“ ‘In idea, a thousand nameless joys’ : secondary qualities in Arnauld, Locke, and Haywood’s Lasselia.” – See entry in Chapter 3.