“Symbolism and Empire: Stevenson, Scott, and Toy Soldiers.” in The Land of Story Books: Scottish Children’s Literature in the Nineteenth Century, edited by Sarah Dunnigan (University of Edinburgh) (Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 2019) (5537 words) - 2019
“Genre Exchange on the Supernatural Frontier in Stephen King’s The Gunslinger: The Gunfighter Archetype Meets the Ravenous Other” Undead in the West II: They Just Keep Coming, a critical anthology edited by Cynthia Miller (Emerson College) (Scarecrow Press, 2013). (6317 words) - 2013
“Exclusive Interiorities: Forgotten Novels and the Walter Scott Importance Trope.” English Literary History (ELH). (14,700 Words) [forthcoming in Winter 2023 Issue]
“Romancing the Courtroom Anecdote: Henry Cockburn’s and Walter Scott’s Shared Historical Form.” Studies in Romanticism. 61:4 (2022). 559-584. (11,060 Words)
“The Precariousness of Human Life: Jane Austen, Pandemic, and the Coping Mechanisms of 19th-Century Literature.” Nineteenth-Century Contexts. 43.5 (2021). 541-546. (3,149 words)
“Character Evidence, Mediocrity, and Walter Scott’s Advocate-Narrator.” European Romantic Review.” 31:3 (2020). 351-361. (6,339 Words)
“Scott, Godwin, and the Casuistry of Romantic Individualism: Politics, Legal Dysfunction, and Inequality.” European Romantic Review. 31.2 (2020). 219-2241. (13,121 Words)
“Sympathetic Exchange, Sexual Attraction, and the Reinscription of National Identity: Frances Burney’s Evelina as Anglo-Scottish Integration Fantasy” The Burney Journal, Vol. 13, 2016. 83-102. (6,486 words)
“H.P. Lovecraft, Too Much Sex, and Not Enough: Alan Moore’s Playfully Repressive Hypothesis.” Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, Vol 26, Issue 3, 2015. 489-511. (9,997 words)