Comparatively recent work on Henry IV, pt.1 that may
well be relevant to our study of the play: Barker, Roberta.
“Tragical-Comical-Historical Hotspur.” Shakespeare Quarterly 54.3
(2003 Fall): 288-307. <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/shakespeare_quarterly/v054/54.3barker.html
>
Berg, James E. “‘This Dear, Dear Land’: ‘Dearth’ and the Fantasy of the
Land-Grab in Richard II and Henry IV.” English Literary Renaissance
29.2 (1999 Spring): 225 - 45.
Bergbusch, Matt. “Additional Dialogue: William Shakespeare, Queer
Allegory, and My Own Private Idaho.” Shakespeare without Class:
Misappropriations of Cultural Capital. Ed. Donald Hedrick and Bryan
Reynolds. NY: Palgrave, 2000: 209 - 25.
Bulman, James C. “Henry IV, Parts I and 2.” The Cambridge Companion to
Shakespeare’s History Plays. Ed. Michael Hattaway. Cambridge:
Cambridge UP, 2002: 158 - 76.
Candido, Joseph, Ed. Richard II, Henry IV, Parts I and II, and Henry V:
An Annotated Bibliography of Shakespeare Studies, 1777-1997.
Asheville, NC : U of North Carolina P, 1998.
Cattle, Graham. “‘The Detested Blot’: The Representation of the Northern
English in Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part One.” Parergon 13.1 (1995
July): 25 - 32.
Cohen, Derek. “History and the Nation in Richard II and Henry IV.” SEL:
Studies in English Literature, 1500 - 1900 42.2 (2002 Spring): 293 -
315.
Davis, Hugh H. “‘Shakespeare, He’s in the Alley’: My Own Private Idaho and
Shakespeare in the Streets.” Literature/ Film-Quarterly 29.2
(2001): 116 - 21.
Dobson, Michael. “Falstaff after John Bull: Shakespearean History,
Britishness, and the Former United Kingdom.” Shakespeare Jahrbuch
136 (2000): 40 - 55.
Dutton, Richard. “Shakespeare and Lancaster.” Shakespeare Quarterly
49.1 (1998 Spring): 1 - 21.
Efron, Arthur. “War is the Health of the State: An Anarchist Reading of
Henry IV, Part One.”
Works and Days: Essays in the Socio-Historical Dimensions of Literature
and the Arts 10.1.19 (1992 Spring): 7 - 75.
Epstein, Robert. “Literal Opposition: Deconstruction, History, and
Lancaster.” Texas Studies in Literature and Language 44.1 (2002
Spring): 16 - 33. <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/texas_studies_in_literature_and_language/v044/44.1epstein.html
>
Falco, Raphael. “Charismas in Conflict: Richard II and Henry Bolingbroke.”
Exemplaria 11.2 (1999 Fall): 473 - 502.
Falocco, Joe. “Shakespeare, Essex, and Machiavelli.” Journal of the
Wooden O Symposium 2 (2002): 64 - 74.
Goldman, Michael. “History-Making in the Henriad.” Shakespearean
Illuminations: Essays in Honor of Marvin Rosenberg. Ed. Jay Halio and
Hugh Richmond. Newark, DE; London: U of Delaware P; Associated UP, 1998:
203 - 19.
Grady, Hugh. “Falstaff: Subjectivity between the Carnival and the
Aesthetic.” Modern Language Review 96.3 (2001 July): 609 - 23.
Hopkins, Lisa. “The Iliad and the Henriad: Epics and Brothers.”
Classical and Modern Literature: A Quarterly 19.2 (1999 Winter): 149 -
71.
Howlett,-Kathy-M. “Utopian Revisioning of Falstaff’s Tavern World: Orson
Welles’s Chimes at Midnight and Gus Van Sant’s My Own Private Idaho.”
The Reel Shakespeare: Alternative Cinema and Theory. Ed. Lisa S.
Starks and Courtney Lehmann. Madison, NJ and London, England: Fairleigh
Dickinson UP; Associated UP, 2002: 165 - 88.
Hutson, Lorna. “Not the King’s Two Bodies: Reading the ‘Body Politic’ in
Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2.” Rhetoric and Law in Early
Modern Europe. Ed. Victoria Kahn and Lorna Hutson. New Haven: Yale UP,
2001: 166 - 98.
Leahy, William. “‘Thy Hunger-Starved Men’: Shakespeare’s Henry Plays and
the Contemporary Lot of the Common Soldier.” Parergon 20.2 (2003
July): 119-34.
McLindon, Tom. Shakespeare’s Tudor History: A Study of Henry IV, Parts
1 and 2. Aldershot, England: Ashgate, 2001.
Miller, Anthony. “Henry IV Part 1 and Renaissance Ideologies.” Sydney
Studies in English 16 (1990-1): 33 - 53.
Mossman, Judith. “Plutarch and Shakespeare’s Henry IV Parts 1 and 2.”
Poetica 48 (1997): 99 - 117.
Pechter, Edward. “Where's the Beef? A Pragmatist Reading of An Anarchist
Reading of Henry IV, Part One.” Works and Days: Essays in the
Socio-Historical Dimensions of Literature and the Arts 10.1.19 (1992
Spring): 79 - 85.
Tiffany, Grace. “Shakespeare’s Dionysian Prince: Drama, Politics, and the
‘Athenian’ History Play.” Renaissance Quarterly 52.2 (1999 Summer):
366 - 83.
Wiseman, Susan. “The Family Tree Motel: Subliming Shakespeare in My Own
Private Idaho.” Shakespeare, the Movie: Popularizing the Plays on Film,
TV, and Video. Ed. Lynda E. Boose and Richard Burt. London: Routledge,
1997: 225 - 39. |