|
The History of Rape: A Bibliography compiled by Stefan Blaschke |
|
Adams, Jad. Madder music, stronger wine: the life of Ernest Dowson, poet and decadent. London: Tauris, 2000. Adams, Michael. "Specular rape: reflections on early modern reflections of the present day." Centennial review 41 (1997): pp. 217-250. Aström, Berit. "The creation of the Anglo-Saxon woman." Studia neophilologica 70 (1998): pp. 25-34. Baines, Barbara J. "Effacing rape in early modern representation." ELH 65 (1998): pp. 69-98. Baines, Barbara J. Representing rape in the English early modern period. Lewiston, N.Y.: Edwin Mellen Press, 2003. Balikov, Molly E.M. Telling a picture of rape: the visual and the verbal in Shakespeare's "Lucrece". M.A. Thesis, University of Maryland, 2005. Bamford, Karen. "Imogen's wounded chastity." Essays in theatre - Études théâtrales 12(1) (1993). Bamford, Karen. "Sexual violence in The Queen of Corinth." Other voices, other views: expanding the canon in English Renaissance studies. Edited by Helen Ostovich, Mary V. Silcox and Graham Roebuck. Newark: University of Delaware Press, 1999: pp. 234-252. Bamford, Karen. Sexual violence on the Jacobean stage. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2000. Bamfort, Karen. "Rape and redemption in The Spanish Gypsy." Women, violence, and English Renaissance literature: essays honoring Paul Jorgensen. Edited by Linda Woodbridge and Sharon Beehler. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2003: pp. 29-49. Barrow, Robin J. Narratives of outrage: sexual violence and the Victorian novel. Disseration, University of Iowa, 2004. Bashar, Nazife. "Rape in England between 1550 and 1700." The sexual dynamics of history: men's power, women's resistence. Edited by London Feminist History Group. London: Pluto Press, 1983: pp. 28-42. Berry, Philippa. "Women, language and history in The Rape of Lucrece." Shakespeare survey 44 (1991): pp. 33-39. Biggs, Murray. "Does the Duke rape Bianca in Middleton's Women Beware Women?" Notes and queries 44 (1997): pp. 97-100. Bland, Lucy. "Guardians of the rape or "Vampires upon the nation's health"?: female sexuality and its regulation in early 20th-century Britain." The changing experience of women. Edited by Elizabeth Whitelegg. Oxford: Martin Robertson & Co., 1982: pp. 373-388. Bode, Robert F. "A rape and no rape: Olivia's bedroom revisited." Restoration 12 (1988): pp. 80-95. Boebel, Dagny. "In the carnival world of Adam's garden: roving and rape in Behn's Rover." Broken boundaries: women & feminism in Restoration drama. Edited by Katherine M. Quinsey. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1996: pp. 54-70. Bowers, T. "Seduction narratives and Tory experience in Augustan England." Eighteenth century 40 (1999): pp. 128-154. Brady, Kristin. "Tess and Alec: rape or seduction?" Thomas Hardy annual 4 (1986): pp. 127-147. Bromham A.A. "'A plaque will come': art, rape, and venereal disease in Middleton's Women Beware Women." Entertext 3 (2003): pp. 145-160. Brown, Alyson, and David Barrett. Knowledge of evil: child prostitution and child sexual abuse in twentienth-century England. Cullompton: Willan, 2002. Brown, Murray L. "Sir Hargrave Pollexfen, William Hogarth and 'That Obelisk behind Us': sexual violence in Sir Charles Grandison." Philological quarterly 75 (1996): pp. 455-470. Bullock, Andrea M. Child testimony and the legal definition of childhood in eighteenth-century London. M.A. Thesis, Miami University at Oxford, Ohio, 2004. Burks, Deborah G. Boiling passions, bloody hearts, horrid spectacle: sexuality and violence in the theater of seventeenth-century England. Dissertation, Rutgers University, 1994. Burks, Deborah G. ""I'll want my will else": The Changeling and women's complicity with their rapists." ELH 62 (1995): pp. 759-790.
Burks, Deborah G. ""This sight doth shake all that is man within me": sexual violation and the rhetoric of dissent in The Cardinal." Journal of medieval and early modern studies 26 (1996): pp. 153-190. Buydens, Norma L. Rape and "consent to force": legal doctrine and social context in Victorian Britain. Master of Laws Thesis, University of Saskatchewan, 2007. Camino, Mercedes M. "The stage am I": raping Lucrece in early modern England. Lewiston, NY: Mellen, 1995. Cannon, Christopher. "Raptus in the Chaumpaigne Release and a newly discovered document concerning the life of Geoffrey Chaucer." Speculum 68 (1993): pp. 74-94. Capp, Bernard. "The double standard revisited: plebeian women and male sexual reputation in early modern England." Past & present No. 162 (1999): pp. 70-100. Carroll, William C. "'And love you 'gainst the nature of love': Ovid, rape, and The Two Gentlemen of Verona." Shakespeare's Ovid: the Metamorphoses in the plays and poems. Edited by A.B. Taylor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000: pp. 49-65. Carter, John M. "Rape in medieval England: the evidence of Yorkshire, Wiltshire, and London, 1218-1276." Comitatus 13 (1982): pp. 33-63. Carter, John M. "The status of rape in thirteenth century England, 1218-1275." International journal of women's studies 45 (1984): pp. 407-417. Carter, John M. Rape in medieval England: an historical and sociological study. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1985. Cartlidge, Neil. "'Therof seyus clerkus': slander, rape and Sir Gowther." Cultural encounters in the romance of medieval England. Edited by Corinne Saunders. Woodbridge: Brewer, 2005: pp. 135-147. Carvajal, Cheryl J. 'And from thy wombe a famous progenie': rape and motherhood in Arthurian legend, Spenser's 'Faerie Queene', and early modern drama (Sir Thomas Malory, William Shakespeare, Edmund Spenser). Ann Arbor: ProQuest, 2002. Catty, Jocelyn. Writing rape, writing women in early modern England: unbridled speech. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1999. Chamberlayne, Joanna. "Joan of Kent's tale: adultery and rape in the age of chivalry." Medieval life 5 (1996): pp. 6-9. Chaytor, Miranda. "Husband(ry): narratives of rape in the seventeenth century." Gender & history 7 (1995): pp. 378-407. Clark, Anna K. "Rape or seduction?: a controversy over sexual violence in the nineteenth century." The sexual dynamics of history: men's power, women's resistence. Edited by London Feminist History Group. London: Pluto Press, 1983: pp. 13-27. Clark, Anna K. "Rewriting the history of rape." New society No. 1235 (August 29, 1986): pp. 12-13. Clark, Anna K. Women's silence, men's violence: sexual assault in England, 1770-1845. London: Pandora Press, 1987. Clark, Kate. "The linguistics of blame: representations of women in The Sun's reporting of crimes of sexual violence." Language, text, and context: essays in stylistics. Edited by Michael Toolan. London: Routledge, 1992: pp. 208-224. Clark, Kate. "The linguistics of blame: representations of women in The Sun's reporting of crimes of sexual violence." The feminist critique of language: a reader. Edited by Deborah Cameron. London: Routledge, 1998: pp. 183-197. Clarke, Aidan. "The Atherton trial." Decies 11 (1979): pp. 45-54. Coleman, Julie. "Rape in Anglo-Saxon England." Violence and society in the early medieval West. Edited by Guy Halsall. Rochester: Boydell Press, 1998: pp. 193-204. Conley, Carolyn A. "Rape and justice in Victorian England." Victorian studies 29 (1986), pp. 519-536. Creaser, John. "Milton's Comus: The irrelevance of the Castlehaven scandal." Notes and queries 31 (1984): pp. 307-317. Cullen, Tom. Autumn of terror: Jack the Ripper, his crimes and times. London: The Bodley Head, 1965. D'Cruze, Shani. "Approaching the history of rape and sexual violence: notes towards research." Women's history review 1 (1992): pp. 377-397. D'Cruze, Shani. Crimes of outrage: sex, violence and Victorian working women. London: UCL Press, 1998. D'Cruze, Shani. "Sex, violence and local courts: working-class respectability in a mid-nineteenth-century Lancashire town." British journal of criminology 39 (1999): pp. 39-55. Davis, William A., Jr. "The rape of Tess: Hardy, English law, and the case for sexual assault." Nineteenth-century literature 52 (1997): pp. 221-231. Dawson, Anthony B. "Women Beware Women and the economy of rape." Studies in English literature, 1500-1900 27 (1987): pp. 303-320. DeSalvo, Louise A. Virginia Woolf: the impact of childhood sexual abuse on her life and work. London: Women's Press, 1989. Detmar, Emily. The politics of telling: women's consent and accusations of rape in English Renaissance drama. Dissertation, Miami University, 1997. Detmar-Goebel, Emily. "The need for Lavinia's voice: Titus Andronicus and the telling of rape." Shakespeare studies 29 (2001): pp. 75-92. Dimock, George. "Childhood's end: Lewis Carroll and the image of the rat." Word & image 8 (1992): pp. 183-205. Dinshaw, Carolyn. "Quarrels, rivals, and rape: Gower and Chaucer." "A wyf ther was": essays in honour of Paule Mertens-Fonck. Edited by Juliette Dor. Liège: English Department, University of Liège, 1992: pp. 112-122. Dinshaw, Carolyn. "Rivalry, rape, and manhood: Gower and Chaucer." Violence against women in medieval texts. Edited by Anna Roberts. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1998: pp. 137-160. Durston, Gregory. "Rape in the eighteenth-century metropolis: part 1." British journal for eighteenth-century studies 28 (2005): pp. 167-179. Durston, Gregory. "Rape in the eighteenth-century metropolis: part 2." British journal for eighteenth-century studies 29 (2006): pp. 15-31. Eagleton, Terry. The rape of Clarissa: writing, sexuality, and class struggle in Samuel Richardson. Oxford: Blackwell, 1982. Edelstein, Laurie. "An accusation easily to be made?: rape and malicious prosecution in eighteenth-century England." American journal of legal history 42 (1998): pp. 351-390. Eggert, Katherine. "Spenser's ravishment: rape and rapture in "The Faerie Queene"." Representations No. 70 (2000): pp. 1-26. Eggert, Katherine. "Spenser's ravishment: rape and rapture in "The Faerie Queene"." Representing rape in medieval and early modern literature. Edited by Elizabeth A. Robertson and Christine M. Rose. New York: Palgrave, 2001: pp. 381-410. Everard, Judith. "Public authority and private rights: women in the English royal court of justice, 1196-1250." Sexuality and gender in history: selected essays. Edited by Penelope Hetherington and Philippa Maddern. Nedlands: Centre for Western Australian History, University of Western Australia, 1993: pp. 123-143. Ferguson, Frances. "Rape and the rise of the novel." Representations 20 (1987): pp. 88-112. Feroli, Teresa. "Sodomy and female authority: the Castlehaven scandal and Eleanor Davies's The Restitution of Prophecy (1651)." Women's studies 24 (1994): pp. 31-49. Finke, Laurie, and Martin Shichtman. "The Mont St. Michel Giant: sexual violence and imperialism in the chronicles of Wace and Layamon." Violence against women in medieval texts. Edited by Anna Roberts. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1998: pp. 56-74. Fisler, Ben. "Sexual violence, liminal space, and Love's Last Shift." Theatron (2003): pp. 25-38. Franc, Catherine. "The rejected suitor and rape in hagiography: the unusual case of Thecla." Old English newsletter 34 (2001). Frye, Susan. "Of chastity and violence: Elizabeth I and Edmund Spenser in the House of Busirane." Signs 20 (1994): pp. 49-78. Frye, Susan. "Of chastity and rape: Edmund Spenser confronts Elizabeth I in "The Faerie Queene"." Representing rape in medieval and early modern literature. Edited by Elizabeth A. Robertson and Christine M. Rose. New York: Palgrave, 2001: pp. 353-380. Gammon, J. ""A denial of innocence": female juvenile victims of rape and the English legal system in the eighteenth century." Childhood in question: children, parents and the state. Edited by Anthony John Fletcher and Stephen Hussey. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1999: pp. 74-95. Gammon, J.D. Ravishment and ruin: the construction of stories of sexual violence in England, c. 1640-1820. Dissertation, University of Essex, 2000. Garrett, Cynthia E. "Sexual consent and the art of love in the early modern English lyric." SEL 44 (2004): pp. 37-58. Geis, G. "Lord Hale, witches, and rape." British journal of law and society 5 (1978): pp. 26-44. Gorham, Deborah. "The "maiden tribute of modern Babylon" re-examined: child prostitution and the idea of childhood in late-Victorian England." Victorian studies 21 (1978): pp. 353-379. Gosh, Durba. "Household crimes and domestic order: keeping the peace in colonial Calcutta, c. 1770-c. 1840." Modern Asian studies 38 (2004): pp. 599-623. Gossett, Suzanne. ""Best men are molded out of faults": marrying the rapist in Jacobean drama." English literary Renaissance 14 (1984): pp. 305-327. Gourlay, Kristi. "Roses and thorns: the prosecution of rape in the Middle Ages." Medieval life No. 5 (1996): pp. 29-31. Gransden, Antonia. "The alleged rape by Edward II of the countess of Salisbury." English historical review 87 (1972): pp. 333-344. Grayzel, Susan R. Women's identities at war: gender, motherhood, and politics in Britain and France during the First World War. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999. Greenstadt, Amy. ""Rapt from himself": rape and the poetics of corporeality in Sidney's "Old Arcadia"." Representing rape in medieval and early modern literature. Edited by Elizabeth A. Robertson and Christine M. Rose. New York: Palgrave, 2001: pp. 311-352. Groot, Roger D. "The crime of rape temp. Richard I and John." Journal of legal history 9 (1988): pp. 324-334. Gullace, Nicoletta F. "Sexual violence and family honor: British propaganda and international law during the First World War." American historical review 102 (1997): pp. 714-747. Hanawalt, Barbara A. "Whose story was this?: rape narratives in medieval English courts." "Of good and ill repute": gender and social control in medieval England. Edited by Barbara A. Hanawalt. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998: pp. 124-141. Harris, Jessica, and Sharon Grace. A question of evidence?: investigating and prosecuting rape in the 1990s. London: Home Office, 1999. Harvey, A.D. Sex in Georgian England: attitudes and prejudices from the 1720s to the 1820s. London: Duckworth, 1994. Haswell, Janis E. "Images of rape and buggery: Paul Scott's view of the dual evils of empire." Studies in the novel 33 (2001): pp. 202-223. Hawkes, Emma. "Bibliography of legal records related to rape and ravishment in medieval England." Medieval feminist newsletter 21 (1996): pp. 15-18. Hawkes, Sonia C., and Calvin Wells. "Crime and punishment in an Anglo-Saxon cemetery?". Antiquity 49 (1975): pp. 118-122. Herrup, Cynthia B. "The patriarch at home: the trial of the second Earl of Caslehaven for rape and sodomy." History workshop journal No. 41 (1996): pp. 1-18. Herrup, Cynthia. "'To pluck bright Honour from the pale-faced moon': gender and honour in the Castlehaven story." Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 6th ser., 6 (1996), pp. 137-160. Herrup, Cynthia B. "Finding the bodies." GLQ 5 (1999): pp. 255-265. Herrup, Cynthia B. A house in gross disorder: sex, law, and the 2nd Earl of Castlehaven. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. Horner, Shari. "The language of rape in old English literature and law: views from the Anglo-Saxon(ist)s." Sex and sexuality in Anglo-Saxon England: essays in memory of Daniel Gillmore Calder. Edited by Carol Braun Pasternak and Lisa M.C. Weston. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2004: pp. 149-181. Hough, Carole. "Aelfred's "Domboc" and the language of rape: a reconsideration of Alfred Ch. 11." Medium aevum 66 (1997): pp 1-27. Hough, Carole. "A new reading of Alfred, ch. 26." Nottingham medieval studies 4 (1997): pp. 1-12. Hudault, J. "Une affaire de droit international prive devant les juridictions de Flandre: l'L'affaire Beresford (1781)." Revue du Nord 54 (1971): pp. 203-212. Huppé, Bernard F. "Rape and woman's sovereignty in the Wife of Bath's Tale." Modern language notes 63 (1948): pp. 378-341. Hutchings, Mark. "Middleton's "Women Beware Women": rape, seduction - or power, simply?" Notes and queries 45 (1998): pp. 366-367. Ingram, Martin. "Child sexual abuse in early modern England." Negotiating power in early modern society: order, hierarchy and subordination in Britain and Ireland. Edited by Michael J. Braddick and John Walter. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001: pp. 63-84 and 257-262. Innes-Parker, Catherine. "Sexual violence and the female reader: symbolic "rape" in the Saints' lives of the Katherine Group." Women's studies 24 (1995): pp. 205-217. Jackson, Louise A. Child sexual abuse and the law: London, 1870-1914. Dissertation, University of Surrey, 1997. Jackson, Louise. "The child's word in court: cases of sexual abuse in London, 1870-1914." Gender and crime in modern Europe. Edited by Margaret L. Arnot and Cornelie Usborne. London: UCL Press, 1999: pp. 222-237. Jackson, Louise A. "Family, community and the regulation of child sexual abuse: London, 1870-1914." Childhood in question: children, parents and the state. Edited by Anthony J. Fletcher and Stephen Hussey. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1999: pp. 133-151. Jackson, Louise A. Child sexual abuse in Victorian England. London: Routledge, 2000. Jackson, Louise A. ""Singing birds as well as soap suds": the Salvation Army's work with sexually abused girls in Edwardian England." Gender & history 12 (2000): pp. 107-126. Joseph, Betty. "Mutations of the imperial contract." Genders No. 24 (1996): pp. 35-68. Kahn, Coppélia. "The rape in Shakespeare's Lucrece." Shakespeare studies 9 (1976): pp. 45-72. Kaske, R.E. "Amnon and Thamar on a misericord in Hereford Cathedral." Traditio 45 (1990): pp. 1-6. Kaufman, Anthony. ""The perils of Florinda": Aphra Behn, rape, and the subversion of libertinism in The Rover, Part 1." Restoration and 18th century research 11 (1996): pp. 1-21. Kear, Averil. Bermuda Dick: the true story of Forest of Dean convicts .... Lydney: Lightmoor Press, 2002. Kelly, Alexander G. Jack the Ripper: a bibliography and review of the literature. London: Association of Assistant Librarians, 1973. Kerr, Margaret H. "Husband and wife in criminal proceedings in medieval England." Women, marriage, and family in medieval Christendom: essays in memory of Michael M. Sheehan, C.S.B.. Edited by Constance M. Rousseau and Joel Thomas Rosenthal. Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute, 1998: pp. 211-251. Kittel, Ruth. "Rape in thirteenth-century England: a study of the common law courts." Women and the law: a social historical perspective. Vol. 2. Edited by D. Kelly Weisberg. Cambridge, Mass.: Schenkman, 1982: pp. 101-116. Klerman, Daniel. Settlement and the decline of private prosecution in thirteenth-century England. Oakland: Independent Institute, 2000. Klerman, Daniel. "Settlement and the decline of private prosecution in thirteenth-century England." Law and history review 19 (2001). Kolsky, Elizabeth D. "The body evidencing the crime": gender, law and medicine in colonial India. Ann Arbor: ProQuest, 2002. Kondo, Hiroyuki. "Jajauma Narashi ni okeru kekkon to gokan." Sheikusupia: seki wo koete. Tokyo: Kenkyusha, 2002: pp. 49-68. Kuper, Adam. "Incest, cousin marriage, and the origin of the human sciences in nineteenth-century England." Past & present No. 174 (2002): pp. 158-183. La Fontane, J. "Concepts of evil, witchcraft and the sexual abuse of children in modern England." Etnofoor 5 (1992): pp. 6-20. Lambertz, Jan. "Sexual harassment in the nineteenth-century English cotton industry." History workshop journal No. 19 (1985): pp. 29-61. Lambertz, Janet R. Male-female violence in late Victorian and Edwardian England. B.A. Dissertation, Harvard University, 1979. Lawson, Kate, and Lynn Shakinovsky. The marked body: domestic violence in mid-nineteenth-century literature. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2002. Lee, Brian S. "Exploitation and excommunication in the "Wife of Bath's Tale"." Philological quarterly 74 (1995): pp. 17-35. Leicester, H. Marshall, Jr. ""My bed was ful of verray blood.": subject, dream, and rape in the Wife of Bath's prologue and tale." Geoffrey Chaucer: The Wife of Bath. Complete authoritative text with biographical and historical contexts, critical history, and essays from five contemporary critical perspectives. Edited by Peter G. Beidler. Bedford Books of St. Martin's Press, 1996: pp. 234-254. Levine, Mortimer. "A more than ordinary case of "rape", 13 and 14 Elizabeth I." American journal of legal history 7 (1963): pp. 159-164. Lewis, Linda M. "Rape and resurrection in Aurora Leigh." Studies in Browning and his circle 19 (1991): pp. 56-65. Lilly, Robert J. La face cachée des GI's: les viols commis par des soldats américains en France, Angleterre et en Allemagne pendant la Seconde Guerre Mondiale 1942-1945. Paris: Éditions Payot et Rivages, 2003. MacGregor, Catherine. "Undoing the body politic: representing rape in Women Beware Women." Theatre research international 23 (1998): pp. 14-23. Marcus, Leah S. "The milieu of Milton's Comus: judicial reform at Ludlow and the problem of sexual assault." Criticism 25 (1983): pp. 293-327. Marsden, Jean I. "Rape, voyeurism, and the Restoration stage." Broken boundaries: women and feminism in Restoration drama. Edited by Katherine M. Quinsey. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1996: pp. 185-200. Mast, Isabelle. "Rape in John Gower's "Confessio Amantis" and other related works." Young medieval women. Edited by Katherine J. Lewis, Noël James Menuge, and Kim M. Phillips. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1999: pp. 103-132. Mathieson, Barbara. "Rape, female desire, and sexual revulsion in John Fletcher's plays." Women, violence, and English Renaissance literature: essays honoring Paul Jorgensen. Edited by Linda Woodbridge and Sharon Beehler. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2003: pp. 101-122. McLachlan, Hugh V., and J.K. Swales. "Lord Hale, witches, and rape: a comment." British journal of law and society 5 (1978): pp. 251-261. Miller, Nancy W. "Chastity, rape, and ideology in the Castlehaven testimonies and Milton's Ludlow Mask." Milton studies 32 (1995): pp. 153-168. Mohanram, Radhika. "White sex: rape and race in Paul Scott's The Raj Quartet." New literatures review 41 (2004): pp. 65-84. Musson, Anthony. "Crossing boundaries: attitudes to rape in late medieval England." Boundaries of the law: geography, gender, and jurisdiction in medieval and early modern Europe. Edited by Anthony Musson. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005: pp.84-101. Myers, Alexander A. "'Embraces forcible and foul': viewing Milton's Sin as a rape victim." Milton quarterly 28 (1994): pp. 11-15. Newton, Melanie J. "The King v. Robert James, a slave, for rape: inequality, gender, and British slave amelioration, 1823-1834." Comparative studies in society and history 47 (2005): pp. 583-610. O'Brien, Timothy D. "Seductive violence and three Chaucerian women." College literature 28 (2001): pp. 178-196. Orr, Patricia. "Men's theory and women's reality: rape prosecutions in the English royal courts of justice, 1194-1222." The rusted hauberk: feudal ideas of order and their decline. Edited by Liam O. Purdon and Cindy L. Vitto. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1994: pp. 121-159. Orr, Patricia R. "Non Potest Appellum Facere: criminal charges women could not -- but did -- bring in thirteenth-century English courts of justice." The final argument: the imprint of violence on society in medieval and early modern Europe. Edited by Donald J. Kagay and L.J. Andrew Villalon. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 1998: pp. 141-160. Owen, Susan J. ""He that should guard my virtue has betrayed it": the dramatization of rape in the exclusion crisis." Restoration and 18th century theatre research 9 (1994): pp. 59-68. Pacheco, Anita. "Rape and the female subject in Aphra Behn's "The Rover"." ELH 65 (1998): pp. 323-345. Paxton, Nancy L. "Mobilizing chivalry: rape in British novels about the Indian uprising of 1857." Victorian studies 36 (1992): pp. 5-30. Paxton, Nancy L. "Mobilizing chivalry: rape in Flora Annie Steel's On the Face of the Waters (1896) and other British novels about the Indian uprising of 1857." The new nineteenth century: feminist readings of underread Victorian fiction. Edited by Barbara Leah Harman and Susan Meyer. New York and London: Garland, 1996: pp. 247-275. Paxton, Nancy L. Writing under the Raj: gender, race, and rape in the British colonial imagination, 1830-1947. New Brunswick, NJ, and London: Rutgers University Press, 1999. Pearson, Jacqueline. The prostituted muse: images of women and women dramatists, 1642-1737. New York and London: St. Martin's Press, 1988. Phillips, Kim M. "Written on the body: reading rape from the twelfth to fifteenth centuries." Medieval women and the law. Edited by Noël James Menuge. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2000: pp. 125-144. Porter, Roy. "A monstrous verdict." New society (August 8, 1986): pp. 9-11. Post, J.B. "Ravishment of women and the statutes of Westminster." Legal records and the historian: papers presented to the Cambridge Legal History Conference, 7-10 July 1975, and in Lincoln's Inn Old Hall on 3 July 1974. Edited by John H. Baker. London: Royal Historical Society, 1978: pp. 150-164. Post, J.B. "Sir Thomas West and the statute of rapes, 1382." Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 53 (1980): pp. 24-30. Post, J.B. "Sir Thomas West and the statute of rapes, 1382." Rape and the criminal justice system. Edited by Jennifer Temkin. Aldershot: Dartmouth, 1995: pp. 177-183. Potkay, Monica B. Minding the body: women and literature in the Middle Ages, 800-1500. New York: Twayne, 1997. Prest, J.B. "Ravishment of women and the Statutes of Westminster." Legal records and the historian: papers presented to the Cambridge Legal History Conference, 7-10 July 1975, and in Lincoln's Inn Old Hall on 3 July 1974. Edited by John H. Baker. London: Royal Historical Society, 1978: pp. 150-164. Pulsiano, Phillip. "Blessed bodies: the "vitae" of Anglo-Saxon female saints." Parergon 16 (1999): pp. 1-42. Rashkow, Ilona N. Upon the dark places: anti-semitism and sexism in English Renaissance biblical translation. Sheffield: Almond, 1990. Ray, Sid. "'Rape, I fear, was root of thy annoy': the politics of consent in Titus Andronicus." Shakespeare quarterly 49 (1998): 22-39. Richardson, Leslie. ""Who shall restore my lost credit?": rape, reputation, and the marriage market." Studies in eighteenth-century culture 32 (2003): pp. 19-44. Richman, Gerald. "Rape and desire in 'The Wife of Bath's Tale'." Studia neophilologica 61 (1989): pp. 161-165. Ritscher, Lee A. The semiotics of rape in Renaissance English literature. Ann Arbor: ProQuest, 2005. Robertson, Elizabeth. "Comprehending rape in medieval England." Medieval feminist newsletter 21 (1996): pp. 13-15. Robertson, Elizabeth A. ""Raptus" and the poetics of married love in Chaucer's Wife of Bath's Tale and James I's Kingis quair." Reading medieval culture: essays in honor of Robert W. Hanning. Edited by Robert M. Stein and Sandra Pierson Prior. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2005: pp. 302-323. Rooney, Ellen. ""All little more than persuading": Tess and the subject of sexual violence." Rape and representation. Edited by Lynn A. Higgins and Brenda R. Silver. New York and Oxford: Columbia University Press, 1991: pp. 87-114. Rooney, Ellen. "Tess and the subject of sexual violence: reading, rape, seduction." Tess of the d'Urbervilles: complete, authoritative text with biographical and historical contexts, critical history, and essays from five contemporary critical perspectives. Edited by John P. Riquelme. Boston: Bedford, 1998: pp. 462-483. Rose, Christine. "Woman's "pryvete," May, and the privy: fissures in the narrative voice in the "Merchant's Tale"" Chaucer review 4 (1997): pp. 61-77. Rudolph, Julia. "Rape and resistance: women and consent in seventeenth-century English legal and political thought." Journal of British studies 39 (2000): pp. 157-184. Ryan, Louise. ""Drunken tans": representations of sex and violence in the Anglo-Irish war (1919-1921)." Feminist review 66 (2000): pp. 73-94. Sale, Carolyn J. Contested acts: legal performances and literary authority in early modern England. Ann Arbor: ProQuest, 2002. Sale, Carolyn. "Representing Lavinia: the (in)significance of women's consent in legal discourses of rape and ravishment and Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus." Women, violence, and English Renaissance literature: essays honoring Paul Jorgensen. Edited by Linda Woodbridge and Sharon Beehler. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2003: pp. 1-27. Saunders, Corinne J. "'Symtyme the fende': questions of rape in Sir Gowther." Studies in English language and literature. 'Doubt wisely': papers in honour of E.G. Stanley. Edited by M.J. Toswell and E.M. Tyler. London and New York: Routledge, 1996: pp. 286-303. Saunders, Corinne. "A matter of consent: middle English romance and the law of "raptus"." Medieval women and the law. Edited by Noël James Menuge. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2000: pp. 105-124. Saunders, Corinne. "Gender, law and order in thirteenth-century romance." Thirteenth Century England VIII: Proceedings of the Durham Conference, 1999. Edited by Michael Prestwich, Richard Britnell and Robin Frame. Woodbridge: Boydell, 2001: pp. 153-163. Saunders, Corinne J. Rape and ravishment in the literature of medieval England. Woodbridge and Rochester, NY: D.S. Brewer, 2001. Schoenfield, M. "Waging battle: Ashford v. Thornton, Ivanhoe, and legal violence." Prose studies 23 (2000): pp. 61-86. Schwarz, Joan I. Clarissa and the law: inheritance, abduction and rape. Dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1992. Shugg, Wallace. "The baron and the milliner: Lord Baltimore's rape trial as a mirror of class tensions in mid-Georgian London." Maryland historical magazine 83 (1988): pp. 310-330. Simpson, Antony E. Masculinity and control: the prosecution of sex offenses in eighteenth-century London. Dissertation, New York University, 1984. Simpson, Antony E. ""Blackmail myth" and the prosecution of rape and its attempt in 18th Centruy London: the creation of a legal tradition." Journal of criminal law and criminology 77 (1986): pp. 101-150. Simpson, Antony E. "Vulnerability and the age of female consent: legal innovation and its effect on prosecutions for rape in eighteenth-century London." Sexual underworlds of the Enlightenment. Edited by G.S. Rousseau and Roy Porter. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1987: pp. 181- . Simpson, Antony E. "Popular perceptions of rape as a capital crime in eighteenth-century England: the press and the trial of Francis Charteris in the Old Bailey, February 1730." Law and history review 22 (2004): pp. 27-70. Smart, Carol. "Reconsidering the recent history of child sexual abuse, 1910-1960." Journal of social policy 29 (2000): pp. 55-71. Smith, Cyril J. "History of rape laws." Women lawyers journal 60 (1974): pp. 188-191. Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll. "A richer and a gentler sex." Social research 53 (1986): pp. 283-309. Sokol, B.J., and Mary Sokol. Shakespeare, law, and marriage. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Solga, Kim. "Rape's metatheatrical return: rehearsing sexual violence among the early moderns." Theatre journal 58 (2006): pp. 53-. Soothill, Keith, Sylvia Walby and Paul Bagguley. "Judges, the media, and rape." Journal of law and society 17 (1990): pp. 211-233. Stevenson, Kim. "Observations on the law relating to sexual offences: the historic scandal of women's silence." Web journal of current legal issues No. 4 (1999). Stevenson, Kim. "'Ingenuities of the female mind': legal and public perceptions of sexual violence in Victorian England, 1850-1890." Everyday violence in Britain, 1850-1950: gender and class. Edited by Shani D'Cruze. Harlow: Longman, 2000: pp. 89-103. Stevenson, Kim. "The respectability imperative: a golden rule in cases of sexual assault?" The golden age: essays in British social and economic history, 1850-1870. Edited by Ian Inkster. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2000: pp. 237-248. Stevenson, Kim. "Unequivocal victims: the historical roots of the mystification of the female complainant in rape cases." Feminist legal studies 8 (2000): pp. 343-366. Stevenson, Kim. "Fulfilling their mission: the intervention of voluntary societies in cases of sexual assault in the Victorian criminal process." Crime, history and society 8 (2004): pp. 93-110. Stevenson, Kim. "'Crimes of moral outrage': Victorian encryptions of sexual violence." Criminal conversations: Victorian crimes, social panic, and moral outrage. Edited by Judith Rowbotham and Kim Stevenson. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2005: pp. 232-246. Stewart, Ann M. "Rape, patriarchy, and the libertine ethos: the function of sexual violence in Aphra Behn's 'The Golden Age' and The Rover, Part 1." Restoration and 18th century research 12 (1997): pp. 26-39. Stewart, Ann M. Rape and attempted rape in the plays of Aphra Behn. Ann Arbor: ProQuest, 2002. Stimpson, Catherine R. "Shakespeare and the soil of rape." The woman's part: feminist criticism of Shakespeare. Edited by Carolyn R.S. Lenz, Gayle Greene, and Carol T. Neely. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1980: pp. 50-64. Straub, Kristina. "Indecent liberties with a poet: audience and the metaphor of rape in Killigrew's "Upon the saying that my verses" and Pope's Arbuthnot." Tulsa studies in women's literature 6 (1987): pp. 27-46. Sussman, Anne. "'Sweetly ravished': Sidney's Old Arcadia and the poetics of sexual violence." Renaissance papers (1994): pp. 55-66. Sylvester, Louise. "Reading rape in medieval literature." Studies in medievalism 10 (1998): pp. 120-135. Tanner, Laura E. Intimate violence: reading rape and torture in twentieth-century fiction. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994. Tauchert, Ashley. "Mary Wollstonecraft and Jane Austen: 'rape' and 'love' as (feminist) social realism and romance." Women 14 (2003): pp. 144-158. Thorne-Murphy, Leslee. "Prostitute rescue, rape, and poetic inspiration in Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "Aurora Leigh"." Women's writing 12 (2005): pp. 241-257. Tice, Pamela P., Doris Georgiou, and Dorothy E. Lemmey. "Victorian children and sex: the reality ignored by proponents of child sexual rights." Journal of psychohistory 30 (2003): pp. 389-420. Tigges, Wim. "'Lat the womman telle hire tale': a reading of The Wife of Bath's Tale." English studies 73 (1992): pp. 97-103. Tomes, Nancy. "A "torrent of abuse": crimes of violence between working-class men and women in London, 1840-1875." Journal of social history 11 (1978): pp. 328-345. Trumble, Kelly L. 'Her body is her own': Victorian feminists, sexual violence, and political subjectivity. Dissertation, Florida State University, 2004. Voeltz, Richard A. "The British Empire, sexuality, feminism and Ronald Hyam." European review of history 3 (1996): pp. 41-45. Walker, Garthine. "Rereading rape and sexual violence in early modern England." Gender and history 10 (1998): pp. 1-25. Walker, Sue S. "Punishing convicted ravishers: statutory strictures and actual practice in thirteenth and fourteenth-century England." Journal of medieval history 13 (1987): pp. 237-250. Walkowitz, Judith R. "Jack the Ripper and the myth of male violence." Feminist studies 8 (1982): pp. 543-574. Walkowitz, Judith R. City of dreadful delight: narratives of sexual dangers in late-Victorian London. Chicago, Ill.: University of Chicago Press, 1992. Walkowitz, Judith R. "Jack the Ripper und der Mythos von der männlichen Gewalt." Die sexuelle Gewalt in der Geschichte. Edited by Alain Corbin. Berlin: Wagenbach, 1992: pp. 107-135 and 153-156. Watson, Robert N., and Stephen Dickey. "Wherefore art thou tereu?: Juliet and the legacy of rape." Renaissance quarterly 63 (2005): pp. 127-156. Weber, Donna-Lee. Fair game: rape and sexual aggression on women in some early eighteenth-century prose fiction. Dissertation, University of Toronto, 1980. Wiener, Martin J. Men of blood: violence, manliness and criminal justice in Victorian England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Williams, Carolyn D. "'Silence, like a Lucrece knife': Shakespeare and the meanings of rape." Yearbook of English studies 23 (1993): pp. 93-110. Williams, Melanie. ""Is Alec a rapist?": cultural connotations of 'rape' and 'seduction'. A reply to Professor John Sutherland." Feminist legal studies 7 (1999): pp. 299-316. Wiseman, Susan. "Abolishing romance: representing rape in Oroonoko." Discourses of slavery and abolition: Britain and its colonies, 1760-1838. Edited by Brycchan Carey, Markman Ellis and Sara Salih. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004: pp. 26-44. Woollacott, Angela. Gender and empire. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. |
|
|