Search Results

Please note: These search results do not contain links to electronic articles hosted by the University of Maryland Libraries, although some may be available online. Please contact the University of Maryland Libraries for assistance in obtaining copies of any of the articles cited in this bibliography.

Your search in the category "Intellectual Life, Literature, and Publishing" returned 1112 results in 56 pages.

Showing results 61 through 80.

61)
Joshi, S. T. “Mencken Bibliography Addenda.” Menckeniana, 165 (Spring 2003): 12-16.

62)
Abell, William S. Arunah Shepherdson Abell (1806-1888), Founder of the Sun of Baltimore. Chevy Chase, MD: Published by the author, 1989.

63)
Acheson, Jon. “Charles Dickens in America: The Baltimore Letters.” Maryland Historical Magazine, 102 (Winter 2007): 320-37.

64)
Ackroyd, Peter. Poe: A Life Cut Short. Ackroyd’s Brief Lives. New York: Doubleday, 2008.

65)
Adams, Henry DeCoursey. "The First Fifteen Years of the Montgomery County Historical Society." Montgomery County Story 3 (November 1959): 1-10.

66)
Adams, Willi Paul. "Amerikanische Verfassungdiskussion in Deutscher Sprache: Politische Begriffe in Texten Der Deutschamerikanischen Aufklarung, 1761-88 [American constitutional discussion in the German language: political concepts in texts of the German-American Enlightenment, 1761-88]." Yearbook of German-American Studies 32 (1997): 1-20.

67)
Allison, John. "Poe in Melville's 'The Bell-Tower.'" Poe Studies 29 (June 1996): 9-18.

68)
Allison-Bunnell, Jodi L. "Access in the Time of Salinger: Fair Use and the Papers of Katherine Anne Porter." American Archivist 58 (Summer 1995): 270-82.
Annotations / Notes: University of Maryland, College Park.

69)
Almansour, Ahmed Nidal. “The Middle East in Antebellum America: The Cases of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Edgar Allan Poe.” Ph.D. diss., Ohio State University, 2005.

70)
Amrhine, Kenneth W. "Henry L. Mencken and 'The Polytechnic.'" Menckeniana 75 (Fall 1980): 13-17.

71)
Amrhine, Kenneth W. "The Day Mencken was Arrested." Menckeniana 98 (Summer 1986): 10-12.

72)
Amrhine, Kenneth W. "The Sage and the Pulp." Menckeniana 68 (Winter 1978): 4-6.
Annotations / Notes: H. L. Mencken's history as a pulp fiction publisher is often over-looked, if not unknown. In the 1910s his use of these magazines to support his endeavor as a co-editor of the magazine Smart Set is examined in this article. Noting the financial success of what Mencken called his "louse magazines" over Smart Set , Amrhine concludes that the pulp fiction he published enabled him to maintain his economic status during the period.

73)
Anderson, Douglas. "The Textual Reproductions of Frederick Douglass." Clio 27 (Fall 1998): 57-87.

74)
Anderson, Fenwick. "Mencken's Animadversions on Journalism." Menckeniana 53 (Spring 1975): 6-8.

75)
Anderson, James Mark. "H. L. Mencken's Nietzsche: Recovering a Lost Tradition." Ph.D. diss., Vanderbilt University, 1998.

76)
Anderson, Mark. "Mencken, Nietzsche and Greek Gods." Menckeniana 142 (Summer 1997): 14-16.

77)
Anderson, Patricia Dockman. "Laying the Foundations: Herbert Baxter Adams, John Thomas Scharf, and Early Maryland Historical Scholarship." Maryland Historical Magazine 89 (Summer 1994): 170-83.
Annotations / Notes: Adams and Scharf were two of Maryland's leading late nineteenth century historians. They, however, represented two very different historical schools. Adams, a Johns Hopkins professor, was instrumental in the professionalization of the history discipline. Scharf was a "chronicler", a local historian. He also had a strong interest in document preservation. Adams played a pivotal role in the donation of Scharf's collection to Hopkins. Scharf's collection is now housed at the Maryland State Archives.

78)
Angoff, Charles. "H. L. Mencken: A Postscript." South Atlantic Quarterly, 63 (Spring 1964): 227-39.

79)
Arner, Robert D. "Clio's Rhimes: History and Satire in Ebenezer Cooke's 'History of Bacon's Rebellion.'" Southern Literary Journal 6 (Spring 1974): 91-106.

80)
Arner, Robert D. "The Blackness of Darkness: Satire, Romance and Ebenezer Cook's The SotWeed Factor." Tennessee Studies in Literature 21 (1976): 1-10.