Bernard Rosenthal (scholar)
Bernard Rosenthal (born 1934) is an American scholar and historian, professor emeritus of English at Binghamton University, specializing in the history of the Salem witchcraft trials and the writings of Herman Melville. Rosenthal received his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 1968,[1] and was a Fulbright lecturer at Tampere University in Finland in 1996-97.[2]
Major works
- Salem Story: Reading the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 (1993, Cambridge University Press)
- Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt, ed. (2009, Cambridge University Press)
Critical Essays on Hawthorne's "House of the Seen Gables," ed. (1995, G. K. Hall and Prentice Hall) Critical Essays on Charles Brockden Brown, ed. (1981, G. K. Hall) City of Nature: Journeys to Nature in the Age of American Romanticism (1980 University of Delaware Press)
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-09-22. Retrieved 2010-09-06.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- http://assets.cambridge.org/97805216/61669/frontmatter/9780521661669_frontmatter.pdf
gollark: Kill it.
gollark: See, NDs involve *skill*.
gollark: Ignoring SAlts, I mean.
gollark: I actually think NDs should be rarest.
gollark: I mean, you could automate it fine, presumably, just the weirdness of the TJ'09.
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