Further Reading

WORKS

Lindop, Grevel (gen. ed.), The Works of Thomas De Quincey, 21 vols. (Pickering and Chatto: London and Brookfield, Vermont, 2000–)

Masson, David (ed.), The Collected Writings of Thomas De Quincey, 14 vols. (A. & C. Black: London, 1896–7)

Wright, David (ed.), [De Quincey,] Recollections of the Lakes and Lake Poets (Penguin: Harmondsworth, 1970)

BIOGRAPHY, REMINISCENCES

Eaton, Horace Ainsworth, Thomas De Quincey: A Biography (Oxford University Press: New York, 1936)

Findlay, John Ritchie, Personal Recollections of Thomas De Quincey (Adam & Charles Black: Edinburgh, 1886)

Lindop, Grevel, The Opium-Eater: A Life of Thomas De Quincey (Dent: London; Taplinger: New York, 1981)

Page, H. A. [A. H. Japp], Thomas De Quincey: His Life and Writings, with Unpublished Correspondence (Charles Scribner’s Sons: New York, 1877)

CRITICISM

Barrell, John, The Infection of Thomas De Quincey: A Psychopathology of Imperialism (Yale University Press: New Haven, Conn., 1991)

Clej, Alina, A Genealogy of the Modern Self: Thomas De Quincey and the Intoxication of Writing (Stanford University Press: Stanford, Calif., 1995)

De Luca, V. A., Thomas De Quincey: The Prose of Vision (University of Toronto Press: Toronto, 1980)

Jack, Ian, ‘De Quincey Revises His Confessions’, PMLA 72 (1957), 122–46

Leask, Nigel, ‘“Murdering One’s Double”: Thomas De Quincey and S. T. Coleridge, Autobiography, Opium and Empire in “Confessions of an English Opium Eater” and “Biographia Literaria”’, in British Romantic Writers and the East: Anxieties of Empire (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1992), pp. 170–228

Lindop, Grevel, ‘De Quincey and the Cursed Crocodile’, Essays in Criticism 45/2 (April 1995), 121–40

—, ‘De Quincey’s “Immortal Druggist” and Wordsworth’s “Power of Music”’, Notes and Queries 41 (1994), 341–3

—, ‘De Quincey’s Wordsworthian Quotations’, Wordsworth Circle 26 (1995), 58–65

McDonagh, Josephine, De Quincey’s Disciplines (Clarendon Press: Oxford, 1994)

Morrison, Robert, ‘De Quincey and the Opium-Eater’s Other Selves’, Romanticism 5/1 (1999), 87–103

—, ‘Opium-Eaters and Magazine Wars: De Quincey and Coleridge in 1821’, Victorian Periodicals Review 30 (1997), 27–40

North, Julian, De Quincey Reviewed: Thomas De Quincey’s Critical Reception, 1821–1994 (Camden House: Columbia, S. Carolina, 1997)

Roberts, Daniel Sanjiv, ‘Exorcising the Malay: Dreams and the Unconscious in Coleridge and De Quincey’, Wordsworth Circle 24 (1993), 91–6

—, ‘De Quincey’s Discovery of Lyrical Ballads: The Politics of Reading’, Studies in Romanticism 36 (1997), 511–40

Rzepka, Charles, ‘De Quincey and the Malay: Dove Cottage Idolatry’, Wordsworth Circle 24 (1993), 180–85

—, Sacramental Commodities: Gift, Text, and the Sublime in De Quincey (University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst, 1995)

Snyder, Robert Lance (ed.), Thomas De Quincey: Bicentenary Studies (University of Oklahoma Press: Norman, 1985)

DRUGS IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY CULTURE

Berridge, Virginia, and Griffith Edwards, Opium and the People: Opiate Use in Nineteenth-Century England (Yale University Press: New Haven, Conn., 1987)

Booth, Martin, Opium: A History (St Martin’s Press: New York, 1996)

Courtwright, David, Forces of Habit: Drugs and the Making of the Modern World (Harvard University Press: Cambridge, Mass., 2001)

Jay, Mike, Artificial Paradises: A Drugs Reader (Penguin: London, 1999)

—, Emperors of Dreams: Drugs in the Nineteenth Century (Dedalus: Sawtry, Cambs., 2000)

Latimer, Dean, and Jeff Goldberg, Flowers in the Blood: The Story of Opium (Franklin Watts: New York, 1981)

Milligan, Barry, Pleasures and Pains: Opium and the Orient in Nineteenth-Century British Culture (University Press of Virginia: Charlottesville, 1995)

Parssinen, Terry M., Secret Passions, Secret Remedies: Narcotic Drugs in British Society 1820–1930 (Institute for the Study of Human Issues: Philadelphia, 1983)

Strausbaugh, John, and Donald Blaise, The Drug User: Documents 1840–1960 (Blast Books: New York, 1991)