Text: Various, “Current Poe Bibliography,” Poe Studies, December 1973, Vol. VI, No. 2, 6:36-42


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[page 36, column 2:]

Current Poe Bibliography

This checklist supplements Professor Richard P. Benton’s checklist of Poe criticism and scholarship appearing in Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 38-45. This listing was compiled by a Committee composed of J. Lasley Dameron, Chairman, Memphis State University; John E. Reilly, College of the Holy Cross; Thomas C. Carlson, Memphis State University; and Judy Osowski, University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee. This Committee, appointed during a meeting of a proposed Poe studies association held at the MLA convention in December 1972, will attempt to publish an annual checklist of Poe criticism in Poe Studies, and will be pleased to receive offprints from any source. Send offprints to J. Lasley Dameron, Department of English, Memphis State University, Memphis, Tennessee 38152.

The Committee wishes to thank the Mississippi Quarterly in granting permission to include listings from its annual bibliography of criticism on Southern literature. In some instances, moreover, annotations from various bibliographical sources like PMLA and American Literature are utilized. Reprints of earlier studies are listed, but are not annotated unless additional bibliographical information is required.

Adams, John F. “Classical Raven Lore and Poe’s Raven,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 53. [Poe ironically plays off the double symbolism of the raven, once a white bird of hope, the raven’s cry was the Greek word for “tomorrow,” which Poe inverts to “nevermore.”]

Ammirata, Guido. Teatro: Edgar Poe, Enrico III Valois, Parnell, Copertina e illustrazioni di Athos Brinkmann (Roma: Il Campidoglio, 1971). [No further information available.]

Anderson, Carl L. Poe in Northlight: The Scandinavian Response to His Life and Work (Durham: Duke Univ. Press, 1973). [Scandinavian interest in Poe accompanies the development of contemporary symbolism in European literature.]

Anon. “The Detached Terrorism in Poe,” Times Literary Supplement [London] (22 January 1971), pp. 95-96. [Review-essay touching on recent books devoted to Poe.]

Arciniegas. German. “Cronologia de Jorge Isaacs. Vida y pasidn de ‘Maria.’ Una aproximacion a Poe,” Nivel, 67 (1968), 1, 8, 12, 21-23. [No further information available.]

Babler, O. F. “Poe’s ‘Raven’ and the Translation of Poetry,” The Nature of Translation: Essays on the Theory and Practice of Literary Translation, ed. James S. Holmes (The Hague: Mouton, 1970), pp. 192-200. [Poe’s “The Raven” is offered as “a concrete case” of a “highly complicated and difficult” work to translate.]

Baker, Christopher P. “Spencer and ‘The City in the Sea,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 55. [The Faerie Queene offers a verbal parallel for Poe’s poem.] [column 2:]

Bales, Kent. “Poetic Justice in ‘The Cask of Amontillado,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 51. [The rich ironic effects of Montresor’s confession to a priest as he prepares to die include the idea that he will be punished for his transgression in the afterlife.]

Bandy, W. T. “The Date of Poe’s Burial,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 47-48. [The correct date of Poe’s funeral was October 8, 1849.]

Banta, Martha. “Benjamin, Edgar, Humbert, and Jay,” Yale Review, 60 (1971), 532-549. [“Franklinian fable and Poesque dream in Gatslky and Lolita “ — PMLA.]

Battilana, Marilla. “Edgar Allan Poe, nostro contemporaneo,” Annali di Ca’Foscari (Venezia), 8, ii (1969), 1-10. [No further information available.]

Benton, Joel. In the Poe Circle (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1972) . [Reprint of the 1899 edition.]

Benton, Richard P. “Edgar Allan Poe: Current Bibliography,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 38-44. [An annotated bibliography covering principally the years 1970-71.]

—————— , ed. “Eureka: A Prose Poem” by Edgar Allan Poe: New Edition with Line Numbers, Exploratory Essay, and Bibliographical Guide (Hartford, Conn.: Transcendental Books, 1973). [Includes a critical survey of the criticism on Eureka and a four-part bibliographical guide. The facsimile is of the 1848 Putnam edition.]

Braddy, Haldeen. “Edgar Allan Poe’s Last Bid for Fame,” Studies in Medieval, Renaissance, [and] American Literature: A Festschrift [Honoring Troy C. Crenshaw, Lorraine Sherley, and Ruth Speer Angell], ed. Betsy F. Colquitt (Fort Worth: Texas Christian Univ. Press, 1971), pp. 134-142. [Poe, an inventive critic, sought to become the literary arbiter of his age.]

——————. Three Dimensional Poe (El Paso: Texas Western Press, 1973). [An introduction to Poe as a poet, a storyteller, and an essayist, along with a selected bibliography of recent Poe criticism.]

Brooks, Cleanth. “Edgar Allan Poe as an Interior Decorator,” A Shaping Joy (New York: Harcourt 1972), pp. 282-290. [First appeared in Ventures, 8 (1968), 41-46.]

Brown, Henry M. “Characterization in the Prose Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe” (Doctoral Diss., Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1971). Abst: DAI, 32 (1971), 2633A. [Poe was fairly consistent as critic and as artist of fictional characterization.]

Bruns, Gerald L. “Poetry as Reality: The Orpheus Myth and Its Modern Counterparts,”ELH, 37 (1970), 263-286. [Poe’s “The Power of Words” lies in the Romantic tradition of the poet as Orphic creator.]

Butterfield, R. W. “Total Poe,” Essays in Criticism, 22 (1972), 196-206. [Review-essay on Thomas Ollive Mabbott’s edition of Poe’s poetry published by the Belknap Press of the Harvard Univ. Press, 1969.]

Cambiaire, Celestin Pierre. The Influence of Edgar Allan Poe in France (New York: Haskell House, 1970). [Reprint of the 1927 edition.]

Campos, Haroldo de. “Edgar Allan Poe: Una engenharia de avessos,” Colo’quio/Letras, 3 (1971), 5-16. [No further information available.]

Cannon, Margaret H. “The Sole Survivor: A Romantic Motif” (Doctoral Diss., Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1970). Abst: DAI, 31 (1971), 6004A-6005A. [Includes discussion of The Narrative of A. Gordon Pym.]

Carlson, Eric W., ed. Edgar Allan Poe: The Fall of the House of Usher (Columbus, Ohio: Charles E. Merrill, 1971). [Casebook for classroom use with critical introduction and editorial aids.]

——————. Poe on the Soul of Man (Baltimore: Edgar Allan Poe Society, 1973). [Poe, in dwelling upon the Edenic myth, Existentialist themes, and psychic transcendence, reveals his insight into the inner recesses of the human soul.]

——————. “Poe’s Vision of Man,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 7-20. [Poe’s writings focus upon man’s spiritual rebirth or rediscovery of his lost psychical power.]

Catlett, L. Scott. “Eureka, una posible crave pare la interpretacion de lo normal y de lo sobrenatural en Poe,” Sextas jornadas de historia y literatvra norteamericana y rioplatense, 2 vols. (Buenos Aires: Asociacion Argentina de Estudios Americanos, 1971) . [No further information available.]

Cauthen, Irby B., Jr. “Another Mallarme-Manet Bookplate for Poe’s ‘Raven,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 56. [On autographed bookplates for Poe’s Raven signed “S. Mallarme” and “E. Manet.”]

[ ——————.] Two Mementoes from the Poe-lngram Collection: An Anniversary Keepsake for Members of the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia 1946- 1971 (Charlottesville: Bibliographical Society of Univ. of Virginia, 1971). [“Facsims. of ms. version of Mallarme’s

‘Au Tombeau d’Edgar Poe’ and bookplate by Manet for tr. of ‘The Raven’ (1875)” — PMLA.]

Cecil, L. Moffitt. “Poe’s Wine List,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 41-42. [Poe’s allusions to wines in his tales reflect his satiric mode.]

Cevasco, G. A. “A rebours and Poe’s Reputation in France,” Romance Notes, 13 (1971), 255-261. [Argues that J. K. Huysmans’ A Rebours contributed greatly to launching Poe’s reputation in France.]

Chase, Lewis Nathaniel. Poe and His Poetry (New York: AMS Press, 1971). [Reprinr of the 1913 edition.]

Chiari, Joseph. Symbolisme from Poe to Mallarme, 2nd ed. (Staten Island, N.Y.: Gordian Press, 1970). Reprint of the 1956 edition.]

Clark, C. E. Frazer, Jr. “Two Unrecorded Notices of Poe’s Parents,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 37. [Two acting notices of Poe’s mother and one notice of his father appear in The Repertory (Boston) .]

Clark, Harry Hayden, comp. American Literature: Poe through Garland (New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1971). [See pp. 76-82 for selected checklist of Poe scholarship.]

Claudel, Alice Moser. “Mystic Symbols in Poe’s ‘The City in the Sea,’” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 54-61. [Interprets Poe’s lyric in the light of Biblical allusions, especially those to Babylon.]

Coyle, William. “An Attack on Poe in 1864,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 161-164. [John Frankenstein, a painter-sculptor of Cincinnati, mistakenly attributed to Poe a criticism of his paintings.]

Dameron, J. Lasley. “Thomas Ollive Mabbott on the Canon of Poe’s Reviews,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 56-57. [Lists essays and reviews appearing in the Virginia edition which should not be attributed to Poe, according to Mabbott’s last judgments on the matter.]

Damon, Samuel Foster. Thomas Holley Chivers, Friend of Poe, with Selections from His Poems (New York: Russell & Russell, 1973). [Reprint of the 1930 edition.]

Davis, Richard B. “Poe Criticism: Some Advances Toward Maturity,” Mississippi Quarterly, 23 (Winter 1969-70), 67-76. [Review-essay on Poe scholarship.]

Delaney, Joan. “Edgar Allan Poe and I. S. Turgenev,” Studia Slavica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 15 (1969), 349-354. [No further information available.] [page 38:]

Didier, Eugene Lemoine. The Poe Cult and Other Poe Papers (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1972). [Reprint of the 1909 edition.]

Dieckmann, Liselotte. “E. T. A. Hoffmann und E. A. Poe: Verwandte Sensibilitat bei verschiedenem Sprache und Gesellschaftsraum,” Dichtung, Sprache Gesselschaft Akten des IV Internationa/en Germanisten-Kongresses 1970 in Princeton, ed. Victor Lange and Hans-Gert Roloff (Frankfurt: Athenaum, 1971), pp. 273-280. [No further information available.]

Dillon, John Milton. Edgar Allan Poe: His Genius and Character (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1973). [Reprint of the 1911 edition.]

Driskell, Daniel. “Lucretius and ‘The City in the Sea,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 54-55. [Parallels between Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura and Poe’s lyric.]

Eguchi, Yuko. Edgar Poe Ronko — Akutagawa Ryvnosuke to Edgar Poe (Tokyo: Sobunsha, 1968). [“Study of Poe and Ryunosuke” — PMLA]

Englekirk, John E. Edgar Allan Poe in Hispanic Literature (New York: Russell & Russell, 1972). [Reprint of the 1934 edition.]

Ensley, Helen. “The Rhythm of Poe’s Poetry” (Doctoral Diss., Univ. of Tennessee at Knoxville, 1971). Abst: DAI, 32 (1971), 2638A. [Poe’s use of rhythm was both tonal and structural.]

Falk, Doris V. “Thomas Low Nichols, Poe, and the ‘Balloon Hoax,’ “ Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 48-49. [Poe himself undermined the commercial success of the “Balloon Hoax.”]

Fauchereau, Serge. “II n’etait pas tout a fait Poe,” Quinzaine Litteraire (16 February 1970), pp. 10-11. [No further information available.]

Freeman, Fred B., Jr. “Poe’s Lowell Trips,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 23-24. [On the relationship between Poe and Mrs. Annie Richmond.]

Fruit, John Phelps. The Mind and Art of Poe’s Poetry (New York: AMS Press, 1969). [Reprint of the 1899 edition; also reprinted by Folcroft Library, 1971.]

Frushell, Richard C. “ ‘An Incarnate Night-Mare’: Moral Grotesquerie in ‘The Black Cat,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 43-44. [Poe’s cats are “progressively emblematic of the perversity of the narrator.”]

Gaillard, Dawson F. D. “A Study of Poe’s Concern with Man’s Powers of Cognition” (Doctoral Diss., Tulane Univ., 1970). Abst: DAI, 31 (1971), 4711A-4712A. [In his fiction, Poe’s “intention is to force man to view his universe and himself in a proper perspective.”]

Galinsky, Hans. Zwei Kassiker der amerikanischen Kurzgeschichte Interpretationen za Edgar Allan Poe u. Ernest Hemingway (Muncher: Diesterweg, 1971). [No further information available.]

Garmon, Gerald M. “Roderick Usher: Portrait of the Madman as Artist,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 11-14. [Roderick Usher longs for freedom, but is destroyed by the “hypersensitivity” that is the heritage of the Ushers and which has been transmitted to the house itself.]

Goldhurst, William. “Poe-esque Themes,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 126-139. [Attempts to classify a variety of themes and motifs throughout Poe’s writings.]

——————. “Poe’s Multiple King Pest: A Source Study,” Tulane Studies in English, 20 (1972), 107-121. [Poe’s tale “King Pest” is a “sophisticated black comedy with political, psychological and mythic implications.”] [column 2:]

—————— , Alfred Appel, Jr., and George P. Clark. “Three Observations on ‘Amontillado’ and Lolita,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 51. [Brief critical debate over the similarities between Poe’s story and Nabokov’s Lolita]

Granger, Byrd Howell. “Devil Lore in ‘The Raven,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 53-54. [Poe’s narrator raises a demon by his study of “forgotten lore” and damns himself; hence he will not be reunited with Lenore in heaven.]

Gravely, William H., Jr. “A Few Words of Clarification on ‘Hans Pfaal,’ “ Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 56. [On the composition date of “Pfaal.”]

——————. “Poe and Thomas Dunn English: More Light on a Probable Reason for Poe’s Failure to Receive a Custom-House Appointment,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 165-193. [English may have used his influence with the administration of John Tyler to prevent Poe’s appointment to a Custom-House in Philadelphia during 1842 and 1843.]

Gregory, Horace. “The Gothic Imagination of Edgar Allan Poe,” Spirit of Time and Place (New York: W. W. Norton, 1973), pp. 52-61. [Reprinted from the 1944 The Shield of Achilles Essays on Beliefs in Poetry]

Grieve, A. I. “Rossetti’s Illustrations to Poe,” A polio, 97 (1973), 142-145. [On W. M. Rossetti’s illustrations to Poe’s “The Raven,” “The Sleeper,” and “Ulalume.”]

Griffith, Clark. “Poe and the Gothic,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 21-27. [Poe shifted the locus of terror from external phenomena to the human mind.]

Hagel, Sissel Lie. “Grunntrekk i Edgar Allan Poes litteraturteori og estetikk,” Edda, 71 (1971), 25-36. [No further information available.]

Halliburton, David. Edgar Allan Poe: A Phenomenological View (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ. Press, 1973). [Poe’s imaginative writings have unity in that his depiction of phenomena, both external and psychological, reveals a unified pattern of experience.]

Hammond, Alexander L. “Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘Tales of the Folio Club,’ “ (Doctoral Diss., Northwestern Univ., 1971). Abst: DAI, 32 (1971), 3251A. [A reconsideration of the form of Poe’s Tales of the Folio Club.]

————————. “Poe’s ‘Lionizing’ and the Design of Tales of the Folio Club,” ESQ, 18 (1972), 154-165. [Newly discovered sources for the 1835 form of “Lionizing” show it to be a satiric imitation of Disraeli’s Vivian Grey and a “quiz” on Disraeli’s early career; Hammond regards “Lionizing” as the capstone tale of the Folio Club series.]

————————. “A Reconstruction of Poe’s 1833 Tales of the Folio Club: Preliminary Notes,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 25-32. [Identifies Poe’s Tales of the Folio Club on the basis of bibliographic and textual evidence and suggests their order, sequence, and meaning in an overall design.]

Harrison, James Albert. Life of Edgar Allan Poe (New York: Haskell House, 1970). [Reprint of the 1903 edition.]

Hatvary, George Egon. “The Whereabouts of Poe’s ‘Fifty Suggestions,’ “ Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 47. [Documents the first appearance of Poe’s “Fifty Suggestions.”]

Hoffman, Daniel. “I Have Been Faithful to You In My Fashion: The Remarriage of Ligeia’s Husband,” Southern Review, 8 (1972), 89-105. [The narrator loves Ligeia for her mind only and tries to possess an “archetype” of “forbidden knowledge” through her; reprinted in Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe poe]

————————. Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe (New York: Doubleday, 1972). [Explores the secret of Poe’s [page 39:] “inescapable truths” and literary achievement.]

————————. “Send-Ups,” London Magazine, n.s., 10 (1970), 30-36. [On Poe’s “The Unparalleled Adventures of One Hans Pfaall”; reprinted in Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe.]

Hoffman, Gerhard. “Raum und Symbol in den Kurzgeschichten Edgar Allan Poes,” Jahrbuch fur Amerikast~dien, 16 (1971), 102-127. [No further information available.]

Holman, Harriet R. “Splitting Poe’s ‘Epicurean Atoms’: Further Speculation on the Literary Satire of Eureka,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 33-37. [Poe uses the atomic theory of Epicurus to develop a satiric conceit involving Lord Rosse’s scientific studies, the volcano of Aetna in the Rossi Mountains, the nebulae of Orion, R. H. Home’s Orion, and the Boston coterie of “satellite” metaphysicians.]

Howarth, William L., ea., Twentieth Century Interpretations of Poe’s Tales ( Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1971) . [Essays are chosen to reflect the diverse effect of Poe’s writing upon twentieth-century literary criticism; see the editor’s introduction, pp. 1-23.]

Hubbell, Jay B. “Edgar Allan Poe,” Eight American A~thors: A Review of Research and Criticism, ed. James Woodress, rev. ed. (New York: Norron, 1971), pp. 3-36. [Assessment of Poe scholarship and criticism up to 1968.]

Humma, John B. “Poe’s ‘Ligeia’: Glanvill’s Will or Blake’s Will?” Mississippi Quarterly, 2G (Winter 1972-73), 55-62. [In “Ligeia,” Poe treats human will as a self-destructive force of the withdrawn intellect.]

Ingram, John H. The Raven. With Literary and Historical Commentary (New York: Haskell House, 1972). [Reprint of the 1885 edition.]

Isani, Mukhtar Ali. “Some Sources for Poe’s ‘Tale of the Ragged Mountains,’ “ Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 38-40. [Poe’s Indian episode in “Tale of the Ragged Mountains” is based not solely on Macaulay’s review of G. R. Gleig’s Memoirs of the Life of Warren Hastings but also on the Memoirs themselves — and on Hastings’ Narrative of the Insurrection and Sheridan’s impeachment speeches.]

Jackson, David Kelly. Poe and the Southern Literary Messenger (New York: Haskell House, 1970). [Reprint of the 1934 edition.]

Jakobson, Roman. “Jazyk v akci,” Studies in Verbal Art: Texts in Czech and Slovak (Ann Arbor: Czechoslovak Society of Arts and Sciences in America and Department of Slavic Language and Literatures, Univ. of Michigan, 1971), pp. 343364. [No further information available.]

Karatson, Andre. Edgar Allan Poe et le groupe des ecrivains du “Nyugat” en Hongrie ( Fac. des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de [’Univ. de Clermont-Ferrand, Deuxieme Sir., Fasc. 30. Paris: Presses univs., 1971). [No further information available.]

Keiley, Jarvis. Edgar Allan Poe: A Probe (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1973). [Reprint of the 1927 edition.]

Kelley, David J. “Delacroix, Ingres et Poe: Valeurs picturales er valeurs litteraires dans ltoeuvre critique de Baudelaire,” Revue d’Histoire Litteraire de la France, 71 (1971), 606-614. [No further information available.]

Kent, Charles Williams, et al., eds., The Book of the Poe Centenary (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1972). [Reprint of the 1909 edition.]

Ketterer, David. “Poe’s Use of the Hoax and the Unity of ‘Hans Pfaall,’ “ Criticism, 13 (1971), 377-385. [A defense of the unity of ‘Hans Pfaall’ as a hoax in relation to Poe’s theory of reality.]

Kimball, William J. “Poe’s Politian and the Beauchamp-Sharp [column 2:] Tragedy,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 24-27. [Poe’s Politian A parallels the Beauchamp-Sharp story, known as the ‘Kentucky Tragedy,’” more closely than critics have recognized.]

King, James Ray. “Richmond in Tokyo: The Fortunes of Edgar Allan Poe in Contemporary Japan,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 194-205. [Emphasizes exotic and terrifying elements found in Poe and certain Japanese writers.]

Knowlton, Edgar C., Jr. “Poe’s Debt to Father Bouhours,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 27-29. [On Poe’s acquaintance with Father Dominique Boubours’ La Maniere de bien Penser.]

Koppenhaver, Allen J “The Cask of Amontillado,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 76-83. [Comments on Poe’s story as treated in a one-act opera composed by the author and Robert J. Haskins of Wilmington College]

Lang, H J. “Poe,” Sonderdruck aus Nordamerikanische Literatur im deutschen Sprachraum seit 1945: Beitrage zv ibrer Rezeption, ed. H. J. Lang, et al. (Muncher: Winkler Verlag, n.d.), pp. 144-148. [No further information available.]

Leary, Lewis. “Edgar Allan Poe: The Adolescent as Confidence Man,” Southern Literary Journal, 4 (1972), 3-21. [Poe has left us with an “unsmutched adolescent dream” without precise significance or meaning.]

Lee, Grace F. “The Quest of Arthur Gordon Pym,” Southern Literary Journal, 4 (1972), 22-33. [Finds a “mythic” structure in Pym, a structure emphasizing a “two-pronged dream quest into the unknown.”]

Legler, Henry Eduard. Poe’s Raven: Its Origin and Genesis (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1972). [Reprint of the 1907 edition.]

Leibman, Mary C. “Dr. Maudsley, Forgotten Poe Diagnostician,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 55. [A British physician authored an 1860 article on Poe’s “psychological condition.”]

Leigh, Oliver [“Geoffrey Quarles”] . Edgar Allan Poe ( Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1972) . [Reprint of the 1906 edition.]

Levine, Stuart. Edgar Poe: Seer and Craftsman (Deland, Fla.: Everett/Edwards, 1972) . [Poe’s concern for logic and craftsmanship is consistent with his aesthetics and transcendent vision of reality.]

Levy, Maurice. “Poe and the Gothic Tradition,” ESQ, 18 (1972), 19-29. [Rejects biographical Freudian interpretations of Poe’s tales and suggests instead that Poe’s imagery reflects psychological archetypes in the Gothic genre rather than Poe’s own sick soul.]

Lieber, Todd M. “The Apocalyptic Imagination of A. Gordon Pym,” Endless Experiments: Essays on the Heroic Experience in American Romanticism (Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State Univ. Press, 1973), pp. 165-189. [Sees The Narrative as a series of related episodes in which Pym gradually rejects “social and natural reality” in favor of the more attractive horrors of solipsistic selfhood.]

Lippit, Noriko M. “Crime and Dream: A Study of Edgar Allan Poe” (Doctoral Diss., Yale Univ. 1970). Abst: DAI, 31 (1971), 3555A. [Analyzes Poe’s “transcendental or grotesque and arabesque imagination.”]

Ludwig, Richard M., et al., eds., “Edgar Allan Poe,” Bibliography Supplement II. Literary History of the United States, 2 vole., 3rd ed. (New York: Macmillan, 1972), pp. 237-239. [Selected bibliography of Poe scholarship for the years 1958-70.]

Lyra, Franciszek. “Polskie Przektady Poezji Poe’a,” Przaglad Humanistyczny, 5 (1972), 107-132. [No further information available.]

Marrs, Robert L. “ ‘The Fall of the House of Usher’: A [page 49:] Checklist of Criticism Since 1960,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 23-24. [Supplements listings found in three articles in the Poe Studies symposium on “Usher.”]

Marsh, John L. “The Psycho-Sexual Reading of ‘The Fall of the House of Usher,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 8-9. [Emphasizes the significance of perverse sensuality and sexual guilt in understanding Poe’s story.]

Martindale, Colin. “Archetype and Reality in ‘The Fall of the House of Usher,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 9-11. [“Both the narrator and ‘The Mad Trist’ contribute significantly to symbolic meaning”; the story may be read in Jungian terms as the narration of Usher’s unsuccessful attempt to escape from a regressive state of consciousness, and the final overwhelming of the ego by the unconscious.]

Martineau, Barbara J. “Dramatized Narration in the Short Fiction of Irving, Poe, and Melville” (Doctoral Diss., Columbia Univ., 1970). Abst: DAI, 31 (1971), 4725A. [Poe concentrated on the “internal narrator, a figure who has participated in the events of his narrative.”]

McElroy, M. O. “Poe’s Last Partner: E. H. N. Patterson of Oquawka, Illinois,” Papers on Language and Literature, 7 (1971), 252-271. [Poe’s relationship with Edward Horton Norton Patterson, a young editor who offered financial help to launch Poe’s Stylus.]

McLean, Robert C. “Poe in the Marketplace,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 21-23. [Discusses current publications on Poe competing for the freshman-sophomore “market” in English study.]

McLuhan, Herbert Marshall. “Edgar Poe’s Tradition,” The Interior Landscape: The Literary Criticism of Marshall McLuhan 1943-1962, ed. Eugene McNamara (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1969), pp. 211-221. [Reprints an essay that first appeared in Sewanee Review, 52 (1944), 24-33.]

Miller, Perry. The Raven and the Whale: The War of Words and Wits in the Era of Poe and Melville (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1973). [Reprint of the 1955 edition.]

Moeller, Hans-Bernhard. “Perception, Word-Play, and the Printed Page: Arno Schmidt and His Poe Novel,” Books Abroad, 45 (1971), 25-30. [Finds Poe to be a significant figure as source and inspiration for Schmidt’s novel Zettel’s Traum.]

Moldenhauer, Joseph J. “Imagination and Perversity in The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym,” Texas Studies in Literature and Language, 13 (1971), 267-280. [The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym “illustrates with unusual clarity a ‘principle’ which operates in almost all Poe’s fiction,” namely “the coincidence or even equation of perversity and creative imagination.”]

Monteiro, George. “Edgar Poe and the New Knowledge,” Southern Literary Journal, 4 (1972), 34-40. [Poe’s sonnet “Sonnet — To Science” is an ironic expression of the Romantic quest for knowledge.]

Moore, Rayburn S. “‘Prophetic Sounds and Loud’: Allen, Stovall, Mabbott, and Other Recent Work on Poe,” Georgia Review, 25 (1971), 481-488. [Reviews Poe scholarship and criticism since 1960.]

Moss, Sidney P. “Poe’s Apocalyptic Vision,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 42-53. [Poe’s major fiction conveys the premise that man suffers from absolute and uncontrollable alienation.]

Muchnic, Helen. “The Unhappy Consciousness: Gogol, Poe, Baudelaire,” Russian Writers (New York: Random House, 1971), pp. 22-46. [Appeared in 19G7 as one of the Katharine Asher Engel Lectures, Smith College, Baltimore.]

Mulqueen, James E. “The Poetics of Emerson and Poe,” Emerson Society Quarterly, No. 55, pt. 1 (2nd Quarter 1969), pp. 5-11. [In view of both theory and practice, the [column 2:] poetics of Emerson and Poe are not irreconcilable.]

Murtuza, Athar. “An Arabian Source for Poe’s ‘The Pit and the Pendulum,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 52. [A specific passage in George Sales’ commentary and translation of the Koran as possible source.]

Nettesheim, Josefine. “Kriminelles, Kriminalistisches und Okkultes in der Dichtung der Droste und Edgar Allan Poes,” Jahrbuch des Wiener Goethe-Vereins. 74 (1970), 136-146. [No further information available.]

Nichols, Mary Sargeant Gove. Reminiscences of Edgar Allan Poe (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1973). [Reprint of the 1931 edition.]

Nomura, Akirsune. E. Allan Poe — Geijutsu to Byori (Tokyo: Kongosha, 1969). [“Poe — Art and pathology” — PMLA.]

Ocano, Armando. Edgar Allan Poe (Madrid: Epesa, 1971). [No further information available.]

Olivero, Federico. Edgar Allan Poe (New York: AMS Press, 1972). [Reprint of the 1932 edition.]

Omans, Glen A. “Poe’s ‘Ulalume’: Drama of the Solipsistic Self,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 62-73. [Poe’s speaker in “Ulalume” confronts the reality of death due to his purely subjective interpretation of reality.]

Orvell, Miles D. “‘The Raven’ and the Chair,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 54. [A subconscious source for Poe’s raven in John Allan’s carved dining chair.]

Osowski, Judy. “Fugitive Poe References: A Bibliography,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 44-46. [Lists and annotates recent books, essays, and miscellaneous publications (principally 1964-70) that do not expressly focus on Poe.]

Ousby, Ian V. K. “‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’ and ‘Doctor D’Arsac’: A Poe Source,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 52. [Points to parallels in the general situation as well as in specific details.]

Oyamada, Yoshifumi. Edgar Poe no Sekai — Shi kara Uchu e. (Tokyo: Shichosha, 1969). [“Poe’s World — from poetry to the universe” — PMLA.]

Pavnaskar, Sadanand R. “Poe in India: A Bibliography, 19551969,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 49-50. [Poe’s reception in India, along with a checklist of translations and criticisms.]

Peden, William. “Prologue to a Dark Journey: The ‘Opening’ to Poe’s Pym,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 84-91. [Suggests that Pym is a “dark” journey at once both physical and metaphysical, the absurdities of which make it an “existential trip from nothingness to nothingness.”]

Phillips, H. Wells. “Poe’s Usher: Precursor of Abstracr Art,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 14-16. [On the “abstractness” of Usher’s paintings.]

Poe, Edgar Allan. Seven Tales. With a French Translation and Prefatory Essay by Charles Baudelaire, ed. W. T. Bandy (New York: Schocken Books, 1971). [See Bandy’s “Introduction,” pp. 1-10.]

Poe, Elizabeth Ellicott. Edgar Allan Poe. A High Priest of the Beautiful (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1973). [Reprint of the 1930 edition.]

Pollin, Burton R. “Dean Swift in the Works of Poe,” Notes & Queries, 20 (1973), 244-246. [Provides a chronological survey of the dozen or so references which Poe made to Jonathan Swift or his works.]

————————. “An 1839 Review of Poe’s Tales in Willis’ The Corsair,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 56. [A significant contemporary review, possibly by Dr. Timothy O. Porter.] [page 41:]

————————. “Light on ‘Shadow’ and Other Pieces by Poe; Or, More of Thomas Moore,” ESQ, 18 (1972), 166173. [An episode in Moore’s The Epicurean furnished Poe with the plot of “Shadow,” and the tale is a burlesque of Moore in the style of the Tales of the Folio Club.]

————————. “Names Used for Humor in Poe’s Fiction,” Love and Wrestling, Butch and O.K., No. 2 (South Central Names Institute), ed. Fred Tarpley (Commerce, Texas: Names Institute Press, 1973), pp. 51-57. [Lists the names Poe used in twenty-one selected tales.]

————————. “Poe and Henry James: A Changing Relationship,” Yearbook of English Studies, 3 (1973), 233-242. [James’ rediscovery of Poe is reflected in some of his works after 1890.]

————————. “Poe’s ‘Eldorado’ Viewed as a Song of the West,” Prairie Schooner, 46 (1972), 228-235. [Suggests Poe conceived of “Eldorado” as a popular ballad.]

————————. “Poe’s Illustration for ‘The Island of the Fay’: A Hoax Detected,” Mystery and Detection Annual (Beverly Hills, Calif.: Donald Adams, 1972), pp. 33-45. [John Sartain, engraver of Graham’s Magazine, illustrated Poe’s “The Island of the Fay.”]

————————. “Poe’s Literary Use of ‘Oppodeldoc’ and Other Patent Medicines,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 30-32. [On Poe’s playful allusions to patent medicines.]

————————. “Poe’s ‘Mystification’: Its Source in Fay’s Norman Leslie,” Mississippi Quarterly, 25 (1972), 111-130. [Poe’s burlesque of dueling in “Mystification” (1837) derives from T. S. Fay’s novel.]

————————. “Poe’s Tale of Psyche Zenobia: A Reading for Humor and Ingenious Construction,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 92-103. [The two-fold tale of Psyche Zenobia evidences Poe’s adroit mastery of satire.]

————————. “Poe’s Use of Material from Bernadin De Saint-Pierre’s Etudes,” Romance Notes, 22 (1971), 331-338. [Focuses on Poe’s likely interest in Bernadin De Saint-Pierre’s discussion of the sea in Etudes de la Nature.]

————————. “Politics and History in Poe’s ‘Mellonta Tauta’: Two Allusions Explained,” Studies in Short Fiction, 8 (1971), 627-631. [Poe’s use of two topical allusions for satiric effect.]

Pope-Hennessy, Dame Una (Birch). Edgar Allan Poe, 18091849. A Critical Biography (New York: Haskell House, 1971) . [Reprint of the 1934 edition.]

Prior, Linda T. “A Further Word on Richard Wright’s Use of Poe in Native Son,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 52-53. [Wright’s use of Poe’s “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.”]

Quinn, Arthur Hobson. Edgar Allan Poe. A Critical Biography (New York: Cooper Square, 1969). [Reprint of the 1941 edition.]

Quinn, Patrick F. “Poe and Nineteenth-Century Poetry,” American Literary Scholarship: An Annual/1971, ed. J. Albert Robbins (Durham, N.C.: Duke Univ. Press, 1973), pp. 190-208. [A review-essay evaluating Poe scholarship for the year indicated.]

Ransome, Arthur. Edgar Allan Poe. A Critical Study (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Press, 1970). [Reprint of the 1910 edition.]

Reece, James B. “An Error in Some Reprintings of Poe’s 1847 Critique of Hawthorne,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 47. [Corrects an error in textual transmission.]

Reilly, John E. “Ermine’s Gales: The Poems Jane Locke Devoted to Poe,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 206-220. [On Poe’s relationship with the sentimental poetess Jane Ermina Locke.] [column 2:]

Ridgley, J. V. “The End of Pym and the Ending of Pym,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chaurry Music Press, 1972), pp. 104-112. [Finds three possible narrative lines in Pym, the third of which “was purposely left open-ended for a desired final effecr of mystification,” but implying a “faintly detailed” story of white ancients who have moved on to the pole.]

Riding, Laura. Contemporaries and Snobs (St. Clair Shores, Mich.: Scholarly Press, 1971) [Reprint of the 1928 edition, containing commentary on Poe.]

Robbins, J. Albert. “Edgar Poe and the Philadelphians: A Reminiscence by a Contemporary,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 45-48. [Poe among Philadelphia journalists from 1839 to 1844.]

Robertson, John Wooster. Edgar A. Poe. A Study (New York: Haskell House, 1970). [Reprint of the 1921 edition.]

Robinson, E. Arthur. “‘New Approaches’ in Poe Criticism,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 48-50. [An essay-review of New Approaches to Poe: A Symposium, ed. Richard P. Benton (Hartford, Conn.: Transcendental Books, 1970).]

Rocks, James E. “Conflict and Motive in ‘The Cask of Amontillado,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 50-51. [Montresor’s murder of Fortunato is explained as a “forthright Catholic reaction against Freemasonry,” but his act deprives him of spiritual peace.]

Roundtree, Thomas J. “Poe’s Universe: The House of Usher and the Narrator,” Tulane Studies in English, 20 (1972), 123-134. [Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher” can be said to be “an early and proleptic embodiment of the workings of Poe’s later theory in Eureka.”]

Salotsbury, George Edward Bateman. Prefaces and Essays (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1970). [Reprint of the 1933 edition, containing commentary on Poe.]

Salzberg, Joel. “The Gothic Hero in Transcendental Quest: Poe’s ‘Ligeia’ and James’ ‘The Beast in the Jungle,’” ESQ, 18 (1972), 108-114. [Both Poe and James make the Gothic hero into a transcendental idealist — but one who is as ruthless in his commitment to the world of the spirit as the earlier Gothic hero was to the world of the flesh.]

Sandler, S. Gerald. “Thomas Holley Chivers, M.D (18091858) and the Origin of Edgar Allan Poe’s ‘The Raven,’” New England Journal of Medicine, 289 (16 August 1973), 351-354. [Reviews the evidence that Poe plagiarized “The Raven” from the poetry of Chivers.]

Schaefer, Charles W “Poe’s ‘Eureka’: The Macrocosmic Analogue,” Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 29 (1971), 353-365. [Poe’s Eureka reveals his concept of the nature and function of art and the artist.]

Scherting, Jack. “Poe’s ‘The Cask of Amontillado’: A Source for Twain’s ‘The Man that Corrupted Hadleyburg,’” Mark Twain Journal, 16 (1972), 18-20. [Poe’s story “served in a sense as a prototype for ‘The Man that Corrupted Hadleyburg.’ ”]

Schmidrchen, Paul W. “The Tender Touch,” Hobbies, 73 (1969), 104-105. [Admires Poe’s technical achievements as poet.]

Schwaber, Paul. “On Reading Poe,” Literature and Psychology, 21 (1971), 81-99. [An analysis of Poe’s life throws light upon his capacity to convey unusual experiences in his tales through carefully wrought structure, especially in “The Fall of the House of Usher.”]

Schwartz, Arthur. “The Transport: A Matter of Time and Space,” CEA Critic, 31 (1968), 14-15. [On the journey motif in Poe’s “To Helen.”]

Skreb, Zdenko. “Welches gesellschaftliche Kollektivbedurfnis befriedigt die Detektiv-geschichte?” Dichtung, Sprache, Gesellschaft: [page 42:] Akten des IV. Internationalen Germanisten-Kongresses 1970 in Princeton, ed. Victor Lange and Hans-Gert Roloff (Frankfurt: Athenaum, 1971), pp. 621-626. [No further information available.]

Smith, Patricia C. “Novel Conceptions, Unusual Combinations: The Arabesque in Poe” (Doctoral Diss., Yale Univ., 1970). Abst: DAI, 31 (1971), 3566A. [Poe’s use of the terms “grotesque” and “arabesque” relates to his concept of unity.]

Smuda, Manfred. “Variation und Innovation: Modelle literarischer Moglichkeiten der Prosa in der Nachfolge Edgar Allan Poes,” Poetica, 3 (1970), 165-187. [No further information available.]

St. Armand, Barton Levi. “Usher Unveiled: Poe and the Metaphysic of Gnosticism,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 1-8. [Considers Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher” in the light of a metaphysic based on the philosophy of alchemy; a series of details in the story corresponds with alchemical Stages of spiritual transmutation, which the story itself comes to allegorize.]

Stauffer, Donald B. “Poe as Phrenologist: The Example of Monsieur Dupin,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 113-125. [“In the creation of Monsieur C. Auguste Dupin, Poe is attempting to attribute equal value to the analytical and poetical powers.”]

Tanizaki, Seiji. Edgar Poe: Hito to Sakuhin (Tokyo: Kenkyusha, 1968). [“Poe: The Man and His Work” — PMLA.]

Thompson, G. R. “Current Poe Studies,” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 63. [Continuing column listing new books, papers delivered, symposia, meetings, and the like.]

————————. “The Face in the Pool: Reflections on the Doppelganger Motif in ‘The Fall of the House of Usher,’” Poe Studies, 5 (1972), 16-21. [Poe uses the narrator’s subjectivity to enhance multiplicity of effect and meaning.]

————————. “Poe and ‘Romantic Irony,’” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 28-41. [Poe’s .irony in the context of “German” Romanticism.]

————————.. Poe’s Fiction: Romantic Irony in the Gothic Tales (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Press, 1973). [Poe’s Gothic fiction ambivalently parodies the Gothic horror tale and can be read “as extended grotesquerie of the human condition.”]

————————. “‘Proper Evidences of Madness’: American Gothic and the Interpretation of ‘Ligeia,’” ESQ, 18 (1972), 30-49. [The question of the deranged narrator’s veracity is reexamined in the light of what the author contends is the dominant American Gothic mode of the “ambiguously explained” supernatural.]

Ticknor, Caroline. Poe’s Helen (New York: Haskell House, 1973). [Reprint of the 1916 edition.]

Trent, William P., et al. Edgar Allan Poe: A Centenary Tribute, ed. Heinrich Ewald Buchholz (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1972). [Reprint of the 1910 edition.]

Trieber, J. Marshall. “The Scornful Grin: A Study of Poesque Humor,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 32-34. [On Poe’s “humor of scorn, wherein our own superiority is tacitly affirmed.”]

Tuerk, Richard. “John Sartain and E. A. Poe,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 21-23. [Presents Sartain’s essay on Poe, which first appeared in the Boston Evening Transcript, 25 February 1893.]

————————. “Sadakichi Hartmann’s ‘How Poe Wrote the Raven’: A Biochemical Explanation,” Markham Review [column 2:] 3 (1973), 81-85. [Introduces and presents Hartmann’s final version of his unpublished essay on the origin of “The Raven.”]

Turner, Arlin. “Poe and Simms: Friendly Critics, Sometimes Friends,” Papers on Poe, ed. Richard P. Veler (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972), pp. 140-160. [The literary relations between Poe and Simms in the light of the American literary scene.]

Tynan, Daniel J. “J. N. Reynolds’ Voyage of the Potomac: Another Source for The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 35-37. [Poe borrowed directly from Reynolds’ Voyage of the Potomac.]

Uchida, Ichigoro. “A Review of Psychological Studies on Edgar Allan Poe 1860-1967,” Collected Essays by the Members of the Faculty, No. 13 (Tokyo: Kyoritsu Women’s Junior College, 1969), pp. 120-139. [“Text in Japanese; checklist (85 items) in English”CPMLA.]

————————. “A Study on the Portraits and Daguerreotypes of Edgar Allan Poe,” Collected Essays by Members of the Faculty, No. 14 (Tokyo: Kyoritsu Women’s Junior College, 1971), pp. 19-38. [“Illus. In Japanese” — PMLA.]

Vanderbilt University, Nashville. Center for Baudelaire Studies. Baudelaire and Poe, an exhibition in conjunction with the inauguration of the Center for Baudelaire Studies, April ninth to thirteenth, 1969 (Nashville: n.p., 1969). [A collection of items that focus on the early stages of Poe’s ascent to fame in Europe.]

Veler, Richard P., ed. Papers on Poe. Essays in Honor of John Ward Ostrom (Springfield, Ohio: Chantry Music Press, 1972). [The seventeen essays “treat diverse aspects of Poe and his work.”]

Vilanova, Angel. “Poe y la actualidad de sus teorias criticas,” Sextas jornadas de historia y literalvra norteamericana y rioplatense, 2 vols. (Buenos Aires: Asociacion Argentina de Estudios Americanos, 1971), [5 pp.]. [No further information available.]

Whitman, Sarah Helen (Power). Edgar Poe and His Critics. With an introduction and notes by Oral Sumner Coad (New York: Haskell House, 1972). [Reprint of the 1949 edition.]

Wilson, James S., et al. Facts About Poe (Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions, 1972) . [Reprint of a 1926 broadside.]

Woodbridge, Hensley C. “Poe in Spanish America: Addenda and Corrigenda,” Poe Studies, 4 (1971), 46. [Comments on four recent items touching on Poe’s reputation in Spanish America.]

Wyss, Hal H. “Involuntary Evil in the Fiction of Brown, Cooper, Poe, Hawthorne, and Melville” (Doctoral Diss. Ohio State Univ., 1971). Abst: DAI, 32 (1971), 1489A. [Relates Poe’s concept of perverseness to intellectual evil.]

Yagi, Toshio. “Poe to America Shosetsu no Dento,” Eigo Seinen [The Rising Generation], 115 (1969), 8-9. [Poe and the Tradition of the American novel.]

Zeydel, Edwin H. “Edgar Allan Poe’s Contacts with German as Seen in His Relations with Ludwig Tieck,” Studies in German Literature of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Festschrift for Frederic E. Coenen, ed. Siegfried Mews (Chapel Hill, N.C.: Univ. of North Carolina Press, 1971), pp. 47-54. [Poe’s knowledge of Tieck was largely secondhand.]

Zimmerman, Melvin. “Baudelaire’s Early Conception of Poe’s Fate,” Revue de litterature comparee, 44 (1970), 117-120. [Baudelaire’s L’Irremediable, 1 (Les Fleurs du mal) reflects the poet’s response to Poe’s life and work.]


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[S:0 - PS, 1973]