Dr. Stephanie Carrez, France, "Symbol
and Interpretation in The Scarlet Letter," paper delivered at the
conference of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Society, celebrating the Hawthorne bicentennial
in Salem, MA, July 1-4
Dr. Clark Davis, Dept. of English, University of Denver, "Reading
and Respect: Hawthorne as Stranger," paper delivered at the conference
of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Society, celebrating the Hawthorne bicentennial in
Salem, MA, July 1-4
Diane E. Foulds, Who Scalped Whom?
Historians Suggest Indians Were As Much Victims As Perpetrators.
David B. Gavenda, park guide, Salem Maritime National Historic Site: From
letters and conversations with Mary Cate, friend of Miss Rebecca Manning
of Salem, MA
David Goss, "Hawthorne's Salem."
Lecture delivered at the Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA on
November 14, 2002. (courtesy of Professor David Goss)
Dr. David Kesterson, University of North Texas: "Hawthorne and Melville," lecture
delivered at Phillips Library, the Peabody Essex Museum on September 23, 2000.
Philip McFarland, Teacher Emeritus, Concord Academy. "Hawthorne
in Concord," lecture delivered at The House of the Seven Gables Historic
Site on April 6, 2005.
Dr. Richard Millington, Smith College: "The
Meanings of Hawthorne's Women," lecture delivered at The House of the Seven
Gables Historic Site on September 8, 2000.
Ms. Margaret B. Moore, independent scholar, Athens, GA:
"Salem
and Hawthorne," lecture delivered at North Shore Community College on August
31, 2000.
"The Mystery of Old
Moodie," paper delivered at Nathaniel Hawthorne Society Summer Meeting,
Northampton, Massachusetts, June 21-23, 2002.
Dr. Melinda Ponder, Pine Manor College:
"Hawthorne and 'The Sphere of Ordinary
Womanhood,'" lecture delivered at Phillips Library, the Peabody Essex Museum
on October 14, 2000.
"Nathaniel
Hawthorne: The Morning of His Life His Boyhood Years and Emergence as an
Artist Part One. Images: The Worlds of Hawthorne's Childhood" , September, 1981,
an essay submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master's
degree in American Studies at Boston College
Jarold Ramsey, "Thoreau's Last Words-- and America's
First Literatures" in Redefining American Literary History, Edited
by A. LaVonne Brown Ruoff & Jerry W. Ward, Jr. The Modern Language Association,
New York, 1990. pp. 52-61.
Edward C. Sampson, "The 'W' in Hawthorne's Name"
from the Essex Institute Historical Collections, vol. 100, 1964, (pp.
297-299).
Dr. Karen Sanchez-Eppler, Professor of American Studies and English, Amherst
College, Amherst, MA, "To Be My Own Human Child:
Parenting and Romance," paper delivered at the American Literature
Association Conference on May 24, 2003.
Anthony Trollope: "The
Genius of Nathaniel Hawthorne,"The North American Review. Volume
129, Issue 274, September 1879 (courtesy of Library of Congress and Cornell
University Library; the American Memory Project)
Dr. Peter Walker, Department of English, Salem State College, "Why
We Still Read Hawthorne 150 Years Later," delivered at Phillips Library
of the Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, MA, on April 17, 2003.