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III.14. 참고문헌 케이스

by 추홍희블로그 2015. 6. 2.

III.14. 참고문헌

 

케이스

 

Austin v. Drew, 4 Camp. N.P. R. 360.

Babcock v. Montgomery County Mutual Insurance Company, 4 N.Y. 326 (1850).

Blyth v Birmingham Waterworks Company (1856) 11 Ex Ch 781.

Depew v. Wheelan 6 Blackf. 485 (1843)

Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1 (1947).

Goldman v. Weinberger 475 U.S. 503 (1986)).

Grey v. Pearson (1857), 6 H.L. Cas. 61.

Heydon's Case [1584] EWHC Exch J 36.

Queen v. M'Naghten, 8 Eng. Rep. 718 [1843]

Ravin v. State 537 P.2d 494 (Alaska 1975).

Scripture v. Lowell Mutual Fire Insurance Company, 64 Mass. 356 (1852).

The People v. Colt 3 Hill 432 (1842)

 

Classics

 

Baudrillard, J., “Simulacra and Simulation”, MUP, 1994.

Brandeis, W., “The Right to Privacy" 4 Harvard L.R. 193 (1890).

Cicero, “On Duties”

Deleuze, G., “Difference and Repetition”, 1968.

Edwards, J., “Charity and Its Fruits”, 1852.

Feuerbach, “The Essence of Christianity”, 1854.

Foucault, M., “Discipline and Punish: The Birth of Prison”, (tr. Sheridan), Vintage, 1995.

Hobbes, “Leviathan”, 1909 ed.

Hume, D., “An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding”, The Harvard Classics (1909–14).

Hume, D., “Of The Study Of History” in “Essays and Treatises on several subjects”, 1758..

Kant, ”Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals”, tr. Ellington [1785] (1993). 3ed.

McMahon, “Happiness: A History”, 2006.

Pease, “The History of the Fabian Society”, 1916.

Priestley, J., “The Doctrine of Philosophical Necessity Illustrated”, 1777.

Scheibe, K., “The Drama of Everyday Life”, HUP, 2000.

Smith, A., “The Wealth of Nations”, (1776). “The Theory of Moral Sentiments”, 1759.

Thucydides, “The History of the Peloponnesian War”, Clarendon Press, 1900 ed.

 

논문

 

Anderson, W., "Form and Meaning in 'Bartleby, the Scrivener’”, Studies in Short Fiction 18 (1981), 383-93.

Arsic, B., “Passive Constitutions or, 7 1/2 times Bartleby”, SUP, 2007.

Arvin, N., “Herman Melville”, Viking, 1950.

Ayo, N., "Bartleby's Lawyer on Trial" Arizona Quarterly 28 (1972), 27–38.

Barbour, (ed.), “Writing the American Classics”, NCUP, 1990.

Barnett, L., "Bartleby as Alienated Worker", Studies in Short Fiction 1 (1974) 1, 379-395.

Baym, N., "Melville's Quarrel with Fiction." PML^4 94 (1979): 903-23.

Bebb, B., “'Bartleby': An Annotated Checklist of Criticism,” 199-229.

Beja, M., "Bartleby and Schizophrenia." Massachusetts Review 19 (1978), 555-568.

Bennett, H, “Humanism, What's That? A Book for Curious Kids”, Prometheus Books, Amherst, NY, 2005.

Bercovitch, (ed.), “Ideology and Classic American Literature”, CUP, 1986.

Berthold, M., "The Prison World of Melville's Pierre and 'Bartleby'" ESQ: A Journal of the American Renaissance 33 (1987), 227-52.

Bollas, C., "Melville's Lost Self: Bartleby." American Imago 31 (1974), 401-411.

Brodwin, S., "To the Frontiers of Eternity: Melville's Crossing in 'Bartleby the Scrivener'", in “Bartleby the Inscrutable: A Collection of Commentary on Herman Melville's Tale "Bartleby the Scrivener", (Ed. Inge) Archon Books, 1979, 174-196.

Clark, M., "Witches and Wall Street: Possession is Nine-Tenths of the Law." Texas Studies in Language and Literature 25 (1983), 55-76.

Conkling, C., "Misery of Christian Joy: Conscience and Freedom in 'Bartleby, the Scrivener." Literature and Belief (1981), 79-89.

Dargo, G., Bartleby, the scrivener: “A House Like Me”, 44 New England Law Review 819.

Deitrich, J., " 'Bartleby' and The Lawyer's Story." American Literature 47 (1975): 432-36.

De Santis, J., "Race, Class, and Herman Melville: a Study of “Bartleby the Scrivener: a Story of Wall Street" and "Benito Cereno", 2009.

Desmarais, J., “Preferring not to: The Paradox of Passive Resistance in Herman Melville’s “Bartleby”, Journal of Short Story in English (2001), 25-39.

Dillingham, W., "Unconscious Duplicity: 'Bartleby, the Scrivener'" Melville's Short Fiction, GUP, 1977.

Dilworth, T., "Narrator of ‘Bartleby’: The Christian-Humanist Acquaintance of John Jacob Astor” 1 Papers on Language & Literature 38 (2002), 49-75.

Emery, A., "The Alternatives of Melville's 'Bartleby.'" 31 Nineteenth-Century Fiction 2 (1976), UCP.

Evans, “The Early History of Preferred Stock in the United States”, 19 The American Economic Review 1 (1929).

Foley, B., “From Wall Street to Astor Place: Historicizing Melville's "Bartleby", 72 American Literature 1 (2000), 87-116.

Giddings, T., "Melville, the Colt-Adams Murder, and 'Bartleby'", Studies in American Fiction 2 (1974), 123-32.

Guillen, M., "Bartleby's Preference: Res Ipsa Loquitu." Journal of the Short Story in English 37 (2001), 31-48.

Hoag, R., "The Corpse in the Office: The Example of Herman Melville's "Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street'." ESQ: A Journal of the American Renaissance 38 (1992), 119-42.

Hunt, M., "That's the Word: Turning Tongues and Heads in 'Bartleby, the Scrivener'."ESQ: A Journal of the American Renaissance 40 (1994), 275-92.

Giles, T., "Melville's ‘Bartleby, the Scrivener’", 65 The Explicator 2 (2007), 88-91.

Inge, M., “Bartleby the Inscrutable: A Collection of Commentary on Herman Melville's Tale ‘Bartleby the Scrivener’”, (Ed.) Archon Books, 1979.

Jaffe, D., "Bartleby, the Scrivener" and "Bleak House." Hamden Court: Archon, 1979.

Kuebrich, D., "Melville's Doctrine of Assumptions: The Hidden Ideology of Capitalist Production in 'Bartleby'" New England Quarterly 69 (1996), 381-405.

Lauter, P., “Canons and Contexts”, OUP, 1991.

Leary, L., "Introduction: B Is for Bartleby." in “Bartleby the Inscrutable: A Collection of Commentary on Herman Melville's Tale "Bartleby the Scrivener", (Ed. Inge) Archon Books, 1979, 13-27.

McCall, D., “The Silence of Bartleby”, CUP, 1989.

McDermott, W., “Reflections on Cicero by a Ciceronian”, 63 The Classical World 5 (1970).

Marcus, M., "Melville's Bartleby as a Psychological Double." College English 23 (1962), 365-368.

Marowitz, W., "'Bartleby' - The Walls of Wall Street." Arizona Quarterly 37 (1981), 335-346.

Marx, L., "Melville's Parable of the Walls." Sewanee 61 (1953), 602-27.

Miller, L, "'Bartleby' and the Dead Letter." Studies in American Fiction 8 (1980), 1-12.

Morgan, W., "Bartleby and the Failure of Conventional Virtue", Renascence: Essays on Values in Literature 45 (1993), 257-271.

Newman, L., “A Reader's Guide to the Short Stories of Herman Melville”, Thorndike Press, 1986.

Norman, L., "Bartleby and the Reader." New England Quarterly 44 (1971), 22-39.

Oliver, E., "A Second Look at Bartleby", College English V 6(8) (1945), 431-439.

Paris, B., “George Eliot's Religion of Humanity”, ELH, Vol. 29, 4 (1962), 418-443.

Parker, H., "Melville's Satire of Emerson and Thoreau: An Evaluation of the Evidence", American Transcendental Quarterly 7 (1970), 61-67.

Parker, H., "The Sequel in 'Bartleby.'" in “Bartleby the Inscrutable: A Collection of Commentary on Herman Melville's Tale "Bartleby the Scrivener", (Ed. Inge) Archon Books, 1979, 159-165.

Patrick, W., “Melville’s Bartleby and the Doctrine of Necessity”, 41 American Literature 1 (1969), 39-54.

Post-Lauria, S., “Canonical texts and context: the example of Herman Melville's "Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street.", 20 College Literature 2 (1993).

Pribeck, T., "An Assumption of Naiveté: The Tone of Melville's Lawyer." Arizona Quarterly 41 (1985), 131-42.

Puk, F., “Bartleby the Scrivener: A Study in Self-Reliance,” Delta 7 (1978).

Reed, N., “The Specter of Wall Street: ‘Bartleby, the Scrivener’ and the Language of Commodities”, 76 American Literature 2 (2004), 247-273.

Reynolds, D., “Beneath the American Renaissance: The Subversive Imagination in the Age of Emerson and Melville”, OUP, 2011.

Rogin, M., “Subversive Genealogy: The Politics and Art of Herman Melville”, UCP, 1985. 

Ronner, A., “The Learned-Helpless Lawyer: Clinical Legal Education and Therapeutic Jurisprudence as Antidotes to Bartleby’s Syndrome”, 24 Touro L. Rev. 601 (2008).

Rosner, M., “Reflections on Cicero in Nineteenth-Centuiy England and America”, 4 Rhetorica 2 (1986).

Roundy, N., “'That Is All I Know of Him': Epistemology and Art in Melville's 'Bartleby.'"Essays in Arts and Sciences 9 (1980), 33-43.

Savarese, R., “Nervous Wrecks and Ginger-nuts: Bartleby at a Standstill”, 5 Leviathan 2 (2003), 19-49.

Schecter, H., "Bartleby The Chronometer." Studies in Short Fiction 19 (1982), 359-366.

Smith, H., "Melville's Master in Chancery and his Recalcitrant Clerk", American Quarterly 17 (1965): 734-741.

Smith, N., “Democracy and the Novel: Popular Resistance to Classic American Writers”, OUP, 1978.

Springer, N., “Bartleby and the Terror of Limitation”, PMLA, 80 (1965).

Stark, J., "Melville, Lemuel Shaw, and 'Bartleby.’”, in “Bartleby the Inscrutable: A Collection of Commentary on Herman Melville's Tale "Bartleby the Scrivener", (Ed. Inge) Archon Books, 1979, 166-73.

Stein W., “Bartleby: The Christian Conscience”, Melville Annual, 104-112, (1965).

Stern, M., "Towards 'Bartleby the Scrivener'," in “The Stoic Strain in American Literature”, (ed MacMillan), TUP, 1979, 19-41.

Trollope, A., “The Life of Cicero”,

Vincent, H., (ed.), “Melville Annual 1965: A Symposium: Bartleby the Scrivener” (Kent Studies in English), KUP, 1966, 140-190.

Weiner, S., “Law in Art: Melville's Major Fiction and Nineteenth-Century American Law”, 1992 (American University Studies: S.24, American Literature. V. 26).

Widmer, K., "Melville's Radical Resistance: The Method and Meaning of 'Bartleby.'" Studies in the Novel 1 (1969), 444-458.

William, B., "Commentary of 'Bartleby'", Arizona Quarterly 37 (1981), 335-346.

Wilson, J., "'Bartleby': The Walls of Wall Street." Arizona Quarterly 37 (1981), 335-346.