The Gaskell Society Journal – Volume 17 (2003)
Liam Corley
The Imperial Addiction of Mary Barton
Louise Henson
History, Science and Social Change: Elizabeth Gaskell’s ‘Evolutionary’ Narratives
Lorna Huett
Commodity and Collectivity: Cranford in the Context of Household Words
Mitsuharu Matsuoka
Gaskell’s Strategies of Silence in ‘The Half Brothers’
Tonya Moutray McArthur
Unwed orders: Religious Communities for Women in the Works of Elizabeth Gaskell
Alan Shelston
From Cranford to The Country of the Pointed Firs: Elizabeth Gaskell’s American Publication and the Work of Sarah Orne Jewett
Larry K. Uffelman
From ‘Martha Preston’ to ‘Half a Life-Time Ago’: Elizabeth Gaskell Rewrites a Story
The Gaskell Society Journal – Volume 18 (2004)
Christine Alexander
Elizabeth Gaskell and Victorian Juvenilia
Tatsuhiro Ohno
The Structure of Ruth: Is the Heroine’s Martyrdom Inconsistent with the Plot?
Marion Shaw
Sylvia’s Lovers, Then and Now
Jennifer Stolpa
What’s in a name? Echoes of Biblical Women in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Ruth
Benjamine Toussaint-Thiriet
‘The Heart of John Middleton’: a Pilgrim’s Progress Towards a New, Feminized Christianity
Dick Watson
Heroes and heroines and Sylvia’s Lovers