
One of the objectives of 452ºF is to deliver, together with the
monographic section of the Journal, a bibliographical selection
corresponding to the theme of each issue. In this case, however, it
will be widely accepted that there is an enormous number of texts
dealing with the works of Edgar Allan Poe. Therefore, the task of
gathering and classifying these texts exceeds the capabilities of our
Journal. We believe this task should be carried out by a group of
specialists in his works, or by a study group, full- time dedicated to
the task, and with material means that our Journal lacks of.
In
fact, there is a group of these characteristics, the Edgar Allan Poe
Society of Baltimore. On its website (http://www.eapoe.org/) we can
find, among other services, thematic bibliographies on different
aspects of the Bostonian writer’s works. Therefore, when dealing with
the process of elaborating the aforementioned bibliography, we decided
that we could not do without the work of our colleagues, bearing in
mind that one of the purposes of our Journal is to encourage the
collaboration among scholars of different backgrounds and origins,
taking advantage of the new media of communication.
Finally, we
decided to limit the ambitions of our bibliography in favour of
thoroughness. We have chosen to mention those fundamental references on
the main three themes that compose our monographic section: Poe and
science fiction, Poe’s relation to science, and Humour in Poe’s works.
However, for the first and third of these themes, there are
bibliographies already available on the Edgar Allan Poe Society of
Baltimore’s website. For this reason, we decided to take their work as
start point and complement it with those papers that either have not
been detected by them, or that still have not been updated.
So
we take this opportunity to congratulate the Edgar Allan Poe Society of
Baltimore for their work, and hope that at least our small
bibliographical contribution will help the colossal task of gathering,
classifying and systematizing the critical production on Edgar Allan
Poe.
POE AND SCIENCE FICTION ARMYTAGE, W.H.G. (1968): Yesterday’s Tomorrow: A Historical Survey of Future Societies. Londres, Routledge & Kegan Paul.
BEAVER, Harold (1976): «Introduction», The Science Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe. New York, Penguin Books, vii - xxi.
CASTILLO,
Francisco Javier (1991): «Ciencia ficción y anticipación científica en
la obra de Edgard Allan Poe», A. Sánchez Macarro (ed.), Studies in
American Literature: Essays in Honor of Enrique García Díez. Valencia,
Universitat de València, 37-52.
ELDER, Matthew Stephen. «Never Otherwise Than Analytic: Poe’s Science of the
Divine», 25/03/2009. < http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/theses/ >
FERRÚS
VICENTE, Joan (2009): «El discurso científico en la obra de Edgar Allan
Poe» [artículo en línea], 452ºF. Revista electrónica de teoría de la
literatura y literatura comparada, 1, 28-41, [Fecha de consulta:
01/07/09],
GRAVELY, William H. (1972): «New Sources for Poe’s ‘Hans Pfall», Tennessee Studies in Literature 17, pp. 139-149.
FRANKLIN,
H. Bruce (1968): Future perfect : American Science Fiction of the
Nineteenth Century: An Anthology. New York, Oxford University Press.
KETTERER, David (1971): «Poe’s Use of the Hoax and the Unity of Hans Pfall», Criticism, vol. 13, 377-385.
MOSKOWITZ, Sam (1963): Explorers of the Infinite. Cleveland/New York, World Publishing Co.
OLNEY, Clarke (1958): «Edgar Allan Poe: Science Fiction Pioneer», Georgia Review, XII, 416-421.
POLLIN,
Burton R. (1996): «Poe: The ‘Virtual’ Inventor, Practitioner, and
Inspirer of Modern Science Fiction», Poe Messenger, XXVI, No. 1, Winter
1996, 18-29, 42-45.
RAINWATER, Catherine (1983), «Encounters with
the ‘White Sphinx’: Poe’s Influence on Some Early Works of H. G.
Wells», English Literature in Transition 1880-1920 XXVI, 35-51.
SWIRSKI,
Peter (2001): Between Literature and Science: Poe, Lem, and
Explorations in Aesthetics, Cognitive Science, and Literary Knowledge.
Montreal, McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2001.
TRESCH, John
(2002): «Extra! Extra! Poe invents science fiction!», The Cambridge
Companion to Edgar Allan Poe. Ed. Kevin J. Hayes. Cambridge University
Press.
WAGES, Jack D (1973): «Isaac Asimov’s Debt to Edgar Allan Poe», Poe Studies, 6, 29.
WALSH,
Lynda (2006): Sins Against Science: The Scientific Media Hoaxes of Poe,
Twain, And Others. New York, State University of New York Press.
WILKINSON, Ronald Sterne (1966): «Poe’s ‘Hans Pfaall’ Reconsidered», Notes and Queries, n.s. XIII, pp. 333-337.
POE’S RELATION TO SCIENCE CHICO
RICO, Francisco (2007): «Edgar A. Poe (1809-1849): entre la crítica
judicial y la crítica romántica norteamericanas», Teoría/crítica:
homenaje a la profesora Carmen Bobes Naves, Miguel Ángel Garrido
Gallardo y Emilio Frechilla Díaz (eds.). Madrid : Instituto de la
Lengua Española, 148-161.
BOND, Frederick Drew (1907): Poe as evolutionist. Popular science monthly, LXI, 267-74.
BURANELLI, Vincent (1972): Edgar Allan Poe. Buenos Aires, Compañía General Fabril Editora.
HOAGLAND,
Clayton (1939): «The Universe of Eureka: a Comparison of the Theories
of Eddington and Poe», Southern Literary Messenger, vol. !, 307-313.
QUINN, Patrick F. (1941): «Poe’s Eureka and Emerson’s Nature», Emerson Society Quaterly, vol. 31, 4-7.
HALL, Thomas (1967): «Poe’s Use of a Source: Davy’s Chemical Researches», Poe’s Newsletter, vol.1, 28.
HOLMAN,
Harriet R. (1969): «Hog, Bacon and other “Savans” in Eureka: notes
toward decoding Poe’s Encyclopaedic Satire of Eureka», Poe Newsletter,
vol. 2, 49-55.
HOLMAN, Harriet R. (1972): «Splitting Poe’s
“Epicurean Atoms”: further speculations on the literary satire of
Eureka», Poe Studies vol. 5, 33-37.
KETTERER, David (1979): The Rationale Deception in Poe. Baton Rouge: Louisiana University Press, 1988.
NORSTED, George (1930): Poe and Einstein. Open court, XLIV, 173-80.
STOTT,
G. St. John (2009): “Neither Genius nor Fudge: Edgar Allan Poe and
Eureka” [online article], 452ºF. Electronic journal of theory of
literature and comparative literature, 1, 52-64, [Accessed on:
01/07/09],
THOMSON, G.R. (1970): «Unity, death, and nothingness–
Poe’s “romantic skepticism”», Publications of de Modern Language
Association, vol. 85, 297-300.
WIMSATT JR., W.K. (1939): «Poe and the Chess Automaton», American Literature vol. II, 138-151).
WYLIE, C.P. (1946): «Mathematical Allusions», Poe en Sciencie Monthly vol. 63, 513-535.
HUMOUR IN POE’S WORKS CASTILLO,
Francisco Javier (1990): «Humor y sátira en la producción narativa de
E. A. Poe: la caricatura del mundo de las revistas», Revista de
Filología de la Universidad de la Laguna, nº 8-9, 75-88.
CHRISTIE,
James W. (1978): «Poe’s ‘Diabolical’ Humor: Revisions in ‘Bob-Bon», B.
F. Fisher, (ed.), Poe at Work: Seven Textual Studies. Baltimore; The
Edgar Allan Poe Society, 44-55.
FERNÁNDEZ ALONSO, Silvia Cristina
(2001): «El humor en los relatos breves de Edgar Allan Poe», C. Larkin
Galiñanes, J. Figueroa Dorrego , M. Urdiales Shaw, C. Vázquez García
(eds.) Estudios sobre el humor literario. Vigo, Universidad de Vigo,
121-132.
GALLOWAY, David, Edgar Allan Poe (1983): The Other Poe. New York. Londres, Penguin Books.
GARGANO,
James W. (1976): «The Distorted Perception of Poe’s Comic Narrators»,
Topic: 30 - A Poe Miscellany, (Washington and Jefferson College,
Pennsylvania), XVI, 23-34.
HAMMOND, Alexander (1972): «A Reconstruction of Poe’s 1833 Tales of the Folio Club», Poe Studies, V, No. 2, December, 25-32.
HAMMOND, Alexander(1975): «Further Notes on Poe’s Tales of the Folio Club» Poe Studies, VIII, No. 2, December, 38-42.
HAMMOND,
Alexander (1976): «Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of the Folio Club: The
Evolution of a Lost Book», Library Chronicle, University of
Pennsylvania, XLI, 13-43.
KANJO, Eugene R. (1969): «The Imp of the Perverse’: Poe’s Dark Comedy of Art and Eath», Poe Studies, II no. 3, October, 41-44.
KIERLY, Robert (1967): «The Comic Masks of Edgar Allan Poe», Umanesimo, 1, 31-41.
LEVINE,
Stuart; LEVINE, Susan F. (1996): «Comic Satires and Grotesques» E. W.
Carlson, (ed.) A Companion to Poe Studies, Westport. Connecticut,
Greenwood Press, 129-148.
MABBOTT, Thomas Ollive (1928): «On Poe’s ‘Tales of the Folio Club» Sewanee Review, XXXVI, 171-176.
MABBOTT,
Thomas Ollive (1969): «Comic Rhymes», The Collected Works of Edgar
Allan Poe - Volume I: Poems. Cambridge, Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press, 485-490.
MARSHALL TRIEBER, J. (1971): «A Study of Poesque Humor», Poe Studies, vol. IV, no. 2, December, 32-34.
MOONEY, Stephen LeRoy (1962): «The Comic in Poe’s Fiction», American Literature, XXXIII, January, 433-441.
MOONEY, Stephen Leroy (1961): «Comic Intent in Poe’s Tales: Five Criteria», Modern Language Notes, LXXVI, January, 432-434.
NEVI, Charles N. (1967): «Irony and ‘The Cask of Amontillado», English Journal, LVI, March, 461-463.
POLLIN,
Burton R. (1972): «Poe’s Tale of Psyche Zenobia: A Reading for Humor
and Ingenious Construction», R. P. Veller (ed.), Papers on Poe: Essays
in Honor of John Ward Ostrom. Springfield, Chantry Music Press, Inc.,
92-103.
REISS, Edmund (1975): «The Comic Setting of Hans Pfall», American Literature, vol. 29, 306-309.
ROAS,
David (2009): «Poe y lo grotesco moderno» [artículo en línea], 452ºF
Revista de Teoría de la Literatura y Literatura Comparada, 1, 13-27,
[Accessed on: 01/07/09], <
http://www.452f.com/issue1/poe-y-lo-grotesco-moderno/ >
ROURKE, Constance (1931): American Humor: a study of the national character. New York, Harcourt, Brace and Company, Inc.
ROYOT,
Daniel (2002): «Poe’s humor en The Cambridge Companion to Edgar Allan
Poe», K. J. Hayes (ed.), Cambridge Collections Online. Cambridge
University Press. 03 June
http://cco.cambridge.org/extract?id=ccol0521793262_CCOL0521793262A006
SZABO, Noemi (2008): Humor in Edgar Allan Poe’s Works. VDM Verlag Publishers.
STAUFFER, Donald Barlow (1982): The Merry Mood: Poe’s Uses of Humor. Baltimore, The Edgar Allan Poe Society.
TAYLOR, Walter Fuller (1934): «Israfel in Motley: A Study of Poe’s Humor», Sewanne Review, XLII, July, 330-340.
THOMSON, G.R. (1973): Poe’s Fiction: Romantic Irony in the Gothic. Madison, University of Wisconsin Press.
WEISSBUCH,
T.N. (1961): «Edgard Allan Poe: Hoaxer in the American Tradition»,
New-York Historical Society Quarterly, vol. 45, 291-309.
WHPPLE, William (1957): «Poe, Clark, and Thingum Bob», American Literature, XXIX, November, 312-316.
WHIPPLE, William (1956): «Poe’s Political Satire» University of Texas Studies in English, no. 35, 81-95.
WHIPPLE, William (1954): «Poe’s Two-Edged Satiric Tale», Nineteenth-Century Fiction vol. 9, 121-133.
WILSON, James Southall (1931): «The Devil Was in It», American Mercury, XXIV, October, 215-220.