This article describes, reconstructs, and analyses the contents of an unexamined manuscript notebook in the hand of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. The notebook is kept in the Brewer-Leigh Hunt Collection at the University of Iowa. A number of material and textual factors allow the use of the notebook to be dated from May 1820 and to June 1822, the time of the Shelleys’ residence at Pisa. The notebook contains transcriptions from Marco Lastri’s L’osservatore fiorentino (1821) and a translation of more than 250 lines of Homer’s Odyssey. It therefore reflects Mary Shelley’s two central literary occupations of her last years in Italy: her historical novel Valperga (1823) and her two-year study of Ancient Greek. Shelley’s Greek studies have receiv...
This paper focuses on Mary Shelley’s letter to her friend Maria Gisborne. In this letter Mary Shelle...
La popolarità in ambito ottocentesco del romance medievale è nota: il saggio indaga il fascino del M...
Includes bibliographical references.Without doubt, Shelley’s later works bear traces of his youthful...
This article describes, reconstructs, and analyses the contents of an unexamined manuscript notebook...
This essay considers the rich evidence for collaboration provided by manuscript study. I am interest...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Illinois, 1914.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
Mary Shelley wrote the largest amount of literary biography at a time when the British reading publi...
The article surveys the interest of some British Second Generation Romantic authors in the myth of ...
This article is about how the context of Geneva may have influenced Mary Shelley when she first conc...
The Oxford Handbook of Shelley takes stock of current developments in the study of a major Romantic ...
This thesis offers a reassessment of the literary relationship and instances of creative collaborati...
For decades, Mary Shelley criticism has undergone steady expansion as she and her work have received...
Even before P.B. Shelley’s drowning, Mary Shelley’s first stay in Italy was marred by the death of h...
Shelley’s major effort during his first months in Italy in 1818 was a rapid and brilliant translatio...
When writing Frankenstein as a young, impressionable woman, Mary Shelley was heavily influenced by t...
This paper focuses on Mary Shelley’s letter to her friend Maria Gisborne. In this letter Mary Shelle...
La popolarità in ambito ottocentesco del romance medievale è nota: il saggio indaga il fascino del M...
Includes bibliographical references.Without doubt, Shelley’s later works bear traces of his youthful...
This article describes, reconstructs, and analyses the contents of an unexamined manuscript notebook...
This essay considers the rich evidence for collaboration provided by manuscript study. I am interest...
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Illinois, 1914.Typescript.Includes bibliographical references
Mary Shelley wrote the largest amount of literary biography at a time when the British reading publi...
The article surveys the interest of some British Second Generation Romantic authors in the myth of ...
This article is about how the context of Geneva may have influenced Mary Shelley when she first conc...
The Oxford Handbook of Shelley takes stock of current developments in the study of a major Romantic ...
This thesis offers a reassessment of the literary relationship and instances of creative collaborati...
For decades, Mary Shelley criticism has undergone steady expansion as she and her work have received...
Even before P.B. Shelley’s drowning, Mary Shelley’s first stay in Italy was marred by the death of h...
Shelley’s major effort during his first months in Italy in 1818 was a rapid and brilliant translatio...
When writing Frankenstein as a young, impressionable woman, Mary Shelley was heavily influenced by t...
This paper focuses on Mary Shelley’s letter to her friend Maria Gisborne. In this letter Mary Shelle...
La popolarità in ambito ottocentesco del romance medievale è nota: il saggio indaga il fascino del M...
Includes bibliographical references.Without doubt, Shelley’s later works bear traces of his youthful...