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The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Berkshire, Jennifer Courtney. Struggling Home: The Spatial Construction of Gender in Nineteenth-Century America. Ph.D. diss., Miami University, 1995.

Betz, Frederick. "Mencken and the 'Patrioteers:' On the History of a Word." Menckeniana 121 (Spring 1992): 1-6; 122 (Summer 1992): 12-15; 123 (Fall 1992): 11-15.

Betz, Frederick. "More on Mencken and the 'Patrioteers.'" Menckeniana 128 (Winter 1993): 10-12.

Betz, Frederick. "'More Than a Work Reference:' A Contemporary Reader's Annotated Edition of Mencken's New Dictionary of Quotations (1942)." Menckeniana 150 (Summer 1999): 3-11.

Blusterbaum, Allison. H. L. Mencken: A Research Guide. New York: Garland Publishers, 1988.

Bode, Carl. "Mencken & Maryland (University that is)." Maryland 13 (Winter 1980): 38-39.

Bode, Carl. "Mencken and Semitism." Menckeniana 120 (Winter 1991): 1-7.

Bode, Carl, ed. The Editor, the Bluenose, and the Prostitute: H. L. Mencken's History of the "Hatrack" Censorship Case. Boulder, CO: Roberts Rinehart, 1988.

Boulter, Doug. "Beginnings and Endings: Edgar Allan Poe and Baltimore." Maryland Humanities (Fall 1997): 13-19.

Brackett, Boone. "What Mencken Means to Me." Menckeniana 131 (Fall 1994): 12-16.

Breslaw, Elaine G. "The Chronicle as Satire: Dr. Hamilton's History of the Tuesday Club." Maryland Historical Magazine (Summer 1975): 129-48.

Breslaw, Elaine G. Dr. Alexander Hamilton and the Enlightenment in Maryland. Ph.D. diss., University of Maryland, 1973.

Breslaw, Elaine G. "Wit, Whimsy, and Politics: The Uses of Satire by the Tuesday Club of Annapolis, 1744 to 1756." William and Mary Quarterly, 3d series, 32 (April 1975): 295-306.
Notes: An introduction to the group of Annapolis wits whose humorous proceedings have survived in a manuscript at the Johns Hopkins University. The antics of the Tuesday Club open a window on the climate of civil discourse that characterized the Golden Era in Annapolis. In contrast to the political tensions that would soon led to revolution, club members employed parodies to mock political conventions. The actual minutes of the club as edited by Professor Breslaw have been published as the <em>Records of the Tuesday Club, 1745 - 1756</em>.

Brody, Selma B. "Source and Significance of Poe's Use of Azote in 'Hans Pfaall.'" Science-Fiction Studies 17, no. 1 (1990): 60-63.

Brown, Arthur A. "Literature and the Impossibility of Death: Poe's 'Berenice.'" Nineteenth-Century Literature 50 (March 1996): 448-63.

Brown, Geoff. "H. L. Mencken." Baltimore 92 (April 1999): 54-55.

Brown, John E. "Toward the Writing of a New County History." Harford Historical Bulletin 64 (Spring 1995): 55-104.

Brownell, Charles F. "Marketing Wild Animals." Menckeniana 149 (Spring 1999): 1-6.

Bryant, John. "Poe's Ape of UnReason: Humor, Ritual, and Culture." Nineteenth-Century Literature 51 (June 1996): 16-52.

Byron, Gilbert. "H. L. Mencken Versus the Eastern Shore." Menckeniana (Summer 1983): 13-16.

Cain, James M. Career in C Major. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1986.

Cain, William E. "H. L. Mencken in Our Time." Sewanee Review 104 (Fall 1996): 229-47.

Cain, William E. "A Lost Voice of Dissent: H. L. Mencken in our Time." Sewanee Review 104 (Spring 1996): 229-47.

Cain, William E. "A Lost Voice of Dissent: H. L. Mencken in our Time." Menckeniana 145 (Spring 1998): 1-11.

Callcott, Margaret Law. "Mrs. Calvert's Poet." Riversdale Letter 14 (Spring 1997): 2.

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