Difference between revisions of "Bibliography T-Z"

From Romance Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(16 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 34: Line 34:
 
;Tapper, Olivia, 2014. : "Romance and Innovation in Twenty-First Century Publishing." ''Publishing Research Quarterly''. Online First. 9 May 2014. [http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12109-014-9363-6 Abstract]
 
;Tapper, Olivia, 2014. : "Romance and Innovation in Twenty-First Century Publishing." ''Publishing Research Quarterly''. Online First. 9 May 2014. [http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12109-014-9363-6 Abstract]
  
;Tatlock, Lynne, 2012. : ''German Writing, American Reading: Women and the Import of Fiction, 1866-1917'' (Columbus: Ohio State UP). [See Chapter 4, entitled "The German Art of the Happy Ending: Embellishing and Expanding the Boundaries of Home."] [https://ohiostatepress.org/index.htm?/books/catalogs/f12.html Details] and [https://ohiostatepress.org/Books/Book%20PDFs/Tatlock%20German.pdf excerpt].
+
;Tatlock, Lynne, 2012. : ''German Writing, American Reading: Women and the Import of Fiction, 1866-1917'' (Columbus: Ohio State UP). [See Chapter 4, entitled "The German Art of the Happy Ending: Embellishing and Expanding the Boundaries of Home."] [https://kb.osu.edu/bitstream/handle/1811/52934/Tatlock_Book4CD.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y].
  
 
;Taylor, Helen, 1989. : 'Romantic Readers" in ''From My Guy to Sci-Fi;Genre and Women's Writing in the Postmodern World.'', ed. Helen Carr, (London: Pandora), pp. 58-77.**
 
;Taylor, Helen, 1989. : 'Romantic Readers" in ''From My Guy to Sci-Fi;Genre and Women's Writing in the Postmodern World.'', ed. Helen Carr, (London: Pandora), pp. 58-77.**
Line 65: Line 65:
  
 
;Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2016. : "Imperial Affairs: The British Empire and the Romantic Novel, 1890-1939", ''New Directions in Popular Fiction: Genre, Distribution, Reproduction'', ed. Ken Gelder. (Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 87-110. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=jxSRDQAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PA87&ots=3A7wkkXgik&sig=KhpRt0EoyzkR3gueGh-4jmfnD7Q#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt]
 
;Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2016. : "Imperial Affairs: The British Empire and the Romantic Novel, 1890-1939", ''New Directions in Popular Fiction: Genre, Distribution, Reproduction'', ed. Ken Gelder. (Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 87-110. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?hl=en&lr=&id=jxSRDQAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PA87&ots=3A7wkkXgik&sig=KhpRt0EoyzkR3gueGh-4jmfnD7Q#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt]
 +
 +
;Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2018. : "The contemporary Anglophone romance genre." ''Oxford research encyclopedia of literature''. Ed. Paula Rabinowitz. Oxford, UK : Oxford University Press. 25 pages. [https://oxfordre.com/literature/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190201098.001.0001/acrefore-9780190201098-e-415 Summary]
  
 
;Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2016. : 'Orientalism, Freedom, and Feminism in Popular Romance Culture', ''Romance Fiction and American Culture: Love as the Practice of Freedom?'' Ed. William A. Gleason and Eric Murphy Selinger (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate), pp. 181-203.
 
;Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2016. : 'Orientalism, Freedom, and Feminism in Popular Romance Culture', ''Romance Fiction and American Culture: Love as the Practice of Freedom?'' Ed. William A. Gleason and Eric Murphy Selinger (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate), pp. 181-203.
Line 96: Line 98:
 
;Tidwell, Christy, 2016. : "“A Little Wildness”: Negotiating Relationships between Human and Nonhuman in Historical Romance", ''Creatural Fictions: Human-Animal Relationships in Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Literature'', Ed. David Herman, Palgrave Studies in Animals and Literature (Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan). 151-171. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BrbtCwAAQBAJ&lpg=PR2&ots=WACtqe0IRc&pg=PA151#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt] [http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-137-51811-8_8 Abstract] [Focuses on Bertrice Small's ''Sky O'Malley'' and Patricia Gaffney's ''Wild at Heart'']
 
;Tidwell, Christy, 2016. : "“A Little Wildness”: Negotiating Relationships between Human and Nonhuman in Historical Romance", ''Creatural Fictions: Human-Animal Relationships in Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Literature'', Ed. David Herman, Palgrave Studies in Animals and Literature (Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan). 151-171. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=BrbtCwAAQBAJ&lpg=PR2&ots=WACtqe0IRc&pg=PA151#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt] [http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-137-51811-8_8 Abstract] [Focuses on Bertrice Small's ''Sky O'Malley'' and Patricia Gaffney's ''Wild at Heart'']
  
;Timson, Beth S., 1983 : ‘The Drug Store Novel: Popular Romantic Fiction and the Mainstream Tradition’, ''Studies in Popular Culture'', 6: 88-96. **
+
;Timson, Beth S., 1983 : ‘The Drug Store Novel: Popular Romantic Fiction and the Mainstream Tradition’, ''Studies in Popular Culture'', 6: 88-96. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/45018109?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents Excerpt]
  
 
;Tobin-McClain, Lee, 2000. : "Paranormal Romance: Secrets of the Female Fantastic." ''Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts'' 11.3 [43]: 294-306. A version was available online [http://maura.setonhill.edu/~tobin/paranormal_romance.htm  here] but it has now been removed. It can still be viewed, however, [http://web.archive.org/web/20080626054710/http://maura.setonhill.edu/~tobin/paranormal_romance.htm via the Internet Archive].
 
;Tobin-McClain, Lee, 2000. : "Paranormal Romance: Secrets of the Female Fantastic." ''Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts'' 11.3 [43]: 294-306. A version was available online [http://maura.setonhill.edu/~tobin/paranormal_romance.htm  here] but it has now been removed. It can still be viewed, however, [http://web.archive.org/web/20080626054710/http://maura.setonhill.edu/~tobin/paranormal_romance.htm via the Internet Archive].
  
 
;Toscano, Angela, 2012. : “A Parody of Love: the Narrative Uses of Rape in Popular Romance.” ''Journal of Popular Romance Studies'' 2.2.[http://jprstudies.org/2012/04/a-parody-of-love-the-narrative-uses-of-rape-in-popular-romance-by-angela-toscano/]
 
;Toscano, Angela, 2012. : “A Parody of Love: the Narrative Uses of Rape in Popular Romance.” ''Journal of Popular Romance Studies'' 2.2.[http://jprstudies.org/2012/04/a-parody-of-love-the-narrative-uses-of-rape-in-popular-romance-by-angela-toscano/]
 +
 +
;Toscano, Angela, 2019. : "The Idolatry of the Real: Form, Formula, and Happy Endings in Romance Literature", Chapter 8, ''Iconoclasm: The Breaking and Making of Images'', edited by Rachel F. Stapleton and Antonio Viselli. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, pp. 173-192.
  
 
;Trachsel, Mary, 1997. : 'Horse Stories and Romance Fiction: Variants or Alternative Texts of Female Identity?', ''Reader: Essays in Reader-Oriented Theory, Criticism, and Pedagogy '', 38-39: 20-41.
 
;Trachsel, Mary, 1997. : 'Horse Stories and Romance Fiction: Variants or Alternative Texts of Female Identity?', ''Reader: Essays in Reader-Oriented Theory, Criticism, and Pedagogy '', 38-39: 20-41.
  
 
;Treacher, Amal, 1988. : ‘What is Life Without my Love: Desire and Romantic Fiction’, in ''Sweet Dreams – Sexuality, Gender and Popular Fiction'', ed. Susannah Radstone (London: Lawrence & Wishart), pp. 73-90. [http://www.questiaschool.com/read/112042277?title=What%20Is%20Life%20without%20My%20Love%3a%20Desire%20and%20Romantic%20Fiction First page.] [Takes [[Sally Wentworth]]'s ''[[Say_Hello_To_Yesterday | Say Hello to Yesterday]]'' as a case study.]
 
;Treacher, Amal, 1988. : ‘What is Life Without my Love: Desire and Romantic Fiction’, in ''Sweet Dreams – Sexuality, Gender and Popular Fiction'', ed. Susannah Radstone (London: Lawrence & Wishart), pp. 73-90. [http://www.questiaschool.com/read/112042277?title=What%20Is%20Life%20without%20My%20Love%3a%20Desire%20and%20Romantic%20Fiction First page.] [Takes [[Sally Wentworth]]'s ''[[Say_Hello_To_Yesterday | Say Hello to Yesterday]]'' as a case study.]
 +
 +
;Trower, Shelley, Amy Tooth Murphy and Graham Smith, 2019. : ‘“Me mum likes a book, me dad’s a newspaper man”: Reading, gender and domestic life in “100 Families”’, ''Participations'' 16.1: 554-581. [http://www.participations.org/Volume%2016/Issue%201/26.pdf]
  
 
;Turnbull, Sue. 2002. : "'Nice Dress, Take It Off': Crime, Romance and the Pleasure of the Text." ''International Journal of Cultural Studies'' 5, no. 1: 67-82. (about Janet Evanovich)
 
;Turnbull, Sue. 2002. : "'Nice Dress, Take It Off': Crime, Romance and the Pleasure of the Text." ''International Journal of Cultural Studies'' 5, no. 1: 67-82. (about Janet Evanovich)
 +
 +
;Turner, Ellen, 2014. : 'The Sheik Returns: Imitations and Parodies of the Desert Romance', in ''Hype: Bestsellers and Literary Cultures'', ed. Jon Helgason, Sara Kärrholm, and Ann Steiner (Lund, Sweden: Nordic Academic Press), pp. 185-202.[http://portal.research.lu.se/ws/files/51193396/Turner.pdf]
 +
 +
;Turner, Ellen, 2015. : 'E. M. Hull's ''Camping in the Sahara'': desert romance meets desert reality', ''Studies in Travel Writing'', online first. [http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13645145.2015.1046236#.VcEp0pOaClM Abstract]
  
 
;Turner, Katherine. 2017. : "Daphne Du Maurier's Mary Anne: Rewriting the Regency Romance as Feminist History." ''University of Toronto Quarterly: A Canadian Journal of the Humanities,'' vol. 86, no. 4, pp. 54-77.[https://muse.jhu.edu/article/678832 Abstract]
 
;Turner, Katherine. 2017. : "Daphne Du Maurier's Mary Anne: Rewriting the Regency Romance as Feminist History." ''University of Toronto Quarterly: A Canadian Journal of the Humanities,'' vol. 86, no. 4, pp. 54-77.[https://muse.jhu.edu/article/678832 Abstract]
Line 112: Line 122:
 
;Ty, Eleanor, 1994. : 'Desire and Temptation: Dialogism and the Carnivalesque in Category Romances', in ''A Dialogue of Voices: Feminist Literary Theory and Bakhtin'', ed. Karen Hohne and Helen Wussow (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), pp. 97-113. [http://books.google.com/books?id=w8ldow_4NmgC&lpg=PP1&ots=Sxh6bpppFk&pg=PA97#v=onepage&q=&f=false Excerpt]
 
;Ty, Eleanor, 1994. : 'Desire and Temptation: Dialogism and the Carnivalesque in Category Romances', in ''A Dialogue of Voices: Feminist Literary Theory and Bakhtin'', ed. Karen Hohne and Helen Wussow (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), pp. 97-113. [http://books.google.com/books?id=w8ldow_4NmgC&lpg=PP1&ots=Sxh6bpppFk&pg=PA97#v=onepage&q=&f=false Excerpt]
  
;Turner, Ellen, 2015. : 'E. M. Hull's ''Camping in the Sahara'': desert romance meets desert reality', ''Studies in Travel Writing'', online first. [http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13645145.2015.1046236#.VcEp0pOaClM Abstract]
 
  
 
==U==
 
==U==
Line 125: Line 134:
  
 
;Valeo, Christina A., 2012. : 'Crusie and the Con', ''Journal of Popular Romance Studies'' 2.2.[http://jprstudies.org/2012/04/crusie-and-the-con-by-christina-a-valeo/]
 
;Valeo, Christina A., 2012. : 'Crusie and the Con', ''Journal of Popular Romance Studies'' 2.2.[http://jprstudies.org/2012/04/crusie-and-the-con-by-christina-a-valeo/]
 +
 +
;Valovirta, Elina, 2019. : "No Ordinary Love: The Romantic Formula of Stepsibling Erotica". ''Thinking with the Familiar in Contemporary Literature and Culture 'Out of the Ordinary''', Ed. Joel Kuortti, Kaisa Ilmonen, Elina Valovirta, Janne Korkka (Leiden: Brill Rodopi), pp. 161-??. [https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004406742_010 Abstract]
  
 
;Valverde, Mariana, 1985. : ''Sex, Power and Pleasure'' (Toronto: Women's Press). [Mentions "formula romance" novels. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=VXrr7W_iusMC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt].]
 
;Valverde, Mariana, 1985. : ''Sex, Power and Pleasure'' (Toronto: Women's Press). [Mentions "formula romance" novels. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=VXrr7W_iusMC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt].]
Line 139: Line 150:
  
 
;Veros, Vassiliki, 2017. : "Keepers: Marking the Value of the Books on my Shelves." ''Proceedings from the Document Academy'' 4.1, Article 4. [http://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/docam/vol4/iss1/4]
 
;Veros, Vassiliki, 2017. : "Keepers: Marking the Value of the Books on my Shelves." ''Proceedings from the Document Academy'' 4.1, Article 4. [http://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/docam/vol4/iss1/4]
 +
 +
;Veros, Vassiliki, 2019. : "Metatextual Conversations: The Exclusion/Inclusion of Genre Fiction in Public Libraries and Social Media Book Groups", ''Journal of the Australian Library and Information Association''. [https://doi.org/10.1080/24750158.2019.1654741 Abstract] [Added when online first and not yet included in a volume or officially paginated.]
  
 
;Vitackova, Martina, 2018. : "Representation of racial and sexual ‘others’ in Afrikaans popular romantic fiction by Sophia Kapp." ''Tydskrif vir letterkunde'' 55.1. 122-133. [https://www.ajol.info/index.php/tvl/article/view/168618 Abstract and link to pdf]
 
;Vitackova, Martina, 2018. : "Representation of racial and sexual ‘others’ in Afrikaans popular romantic fiction by Sophia Kapp." ''Tydskrif vir letterkunde'' 55.1. 122-133. [https://www.ajol.info/index.php/tvl/article/view/168618 Abstract and link to pdf]
Line 165: Line 178:
  
 
;Wallace, Diana, 2005. : ''The Woman's Historical Novel: British Women Writers, 1900-2000.'' Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan. Has the following sections about romance novels - "Captive Women: '[[Jean Plaidy]]' and '[[Victoria Holt]]'","Gender as Masquerade; [[Georgette Heyer]]'s Mask of Romance", "Selling Women's History: Popular Historical Fiction in the 1970s" [Abstract, Index and Excerpt available [http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?is=1403903220 from Palgrave Macmillan].]
 
;Wallace, Diana, 2005. : ''The Woman's Historical Novel: British Women Writers, 1900-2000.'' Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan. Has the following sections about romance novels - "Captive Women: '[[Jean Plaidy]]' and '[[Victoria Holt]]'","Gender as Masquerade; [[Georgette Heyer]]'s Mask of Romance", "Selling Women's History: Popular Historical Fiction in the 1970s" [Abstract, Index and Excerpt available [http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?is=1403903220 from Palgrave Macmillan].]
 +
 +
;Waller, Philip, 2006. : ''Writers, Readers, and Reputations: Literary Life in Britain 1870-1918''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [See chapters "In Cupid's Chains: Charles Garvice" (681-701) and "Hymns and Heroines: Florence Barclay" (702-728). [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=pwcUDAAAQBAJ&lpg=PP1&pg=PA697#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt]]
  
 
;Wardrop, Stephanie, 1995. : "The Heroine is Being Beaten: Freud, Sadomasochism, and Reading the Romance." ''Style'' 29: 459-73. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2342/is_n3_v29/ai_18096761 Unpaginated and unofficial copy]
 
;Wardrop, Stephanie, 1995. : "The Heroine is Being Beaten: Freud, Sadomasochism, and Reading the Romance." ''Style'' 29: 459-73. [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2342/is_n3_v29/ai_18096761 Unpaginated and unofficial copy]
Line 181: Line 196:
  
 
;Weaver-Zercher, Valerie. 2013. : ''Thrill of the Chaste: the Allure of Amish Romance Novels. '' Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=THnWrCcvnyYC&lpg=PP1&dq=editions%3ABHr5jTcPOMQC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt]
 
;Weaver-Zercher, Valerie. 2013. : ''Thrill of the Chaste: the Allure of Amish Romance Novels. '' Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=THnWrCcvnyYC&lpg=PP1&dq=editions%3ABHr5jTcPOMQC&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt]
 +
 +
;Wei, Po-Yu, Rick, 2018. : ‘“She is a Jade”: A Georgian Gaming Woman Re-imagined in Georgette Heyer’s ''Faro’s Daughter''’, ''Crossings'' 9: 122-131.[https://sah.ulab.edu.bd/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2018/09/Crossings_Vol-9_2018_published.pdf#page=122]
  
 
;Weibel, Kathryn, 1977. : ''Mirror Mirror: Images of Women Reflected in Popular Culture'', (Garden City, New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday). [Romances are mainly discussed on pages 32-40.]
 
;Weibel, Kathryn, 1977. : ''Mirror Mirror: Images of Women Reflected in Popular Culture'', (Garden City, New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday). [Romances are mainly discussed on pages 32-40.]
Line 218: Line 235:
 
;Wilkins, Kim, 2016. : '“Ravished by Vikings”: The Pre-modern and the Paranormal in Viking Romance Fiction', ''Journal of Popular Romance Studies'' 5.2 (15 July 2016).[http://jprstudies.org/2016/07/ravished-by-vikings-the-pre-modern-and-the-paranormal-in-viking-romance-fictionby-kim-wilkins/]
 
;Wilkins, Kim, 2016. : '“Ravished by Vikings”: The Pre-modern and the Paranormal in Viking Romance Fiction', ''Journal of Popular Romance Studies'' 5.2 (15 July 2016).[http://jprstudies.org/2016/07/ravished-by-vikings-the-pre-modern-and-the-paranormal-in-viking-romance-fictionby-kim-wilkins/]
  
;Williams, Clover, and Jean R. Freedman, 1995. : "Shakespeare's Step-Sisters: Romance Novels and the Community of Women." in ''Folklore, Literature, and Cultural Theory: Collected Essays.'' ed. Cathy Lynn Preston (New York, NY: Garland) pp. 135-168.  
+
;Williams, Clover, and Jean R. Freedman, 1995. : "Shakespeare's Step-Sisters: Romance Novels and the Community of Women." in ''Folklore, Literature, and Cultural Theory: Collected Essays.'' ed. Cathy Lynn Preston (New York, NY: Garland) pp. 135-168. [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=0PXgAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA136&lpg=PA136#v=onepage&q&f=false Excerpt]
  
 
;Williams, Clover, 1998. : "Keepers of the Flame: The Romance Novel and Its Fans." ''Lore and Language'' 16.1-2: 115-138.
 
;Williams, Clover, 1998. : "Keepers of the Flame: The Romance Novel and Its Fans." ''Lore and Language'' 16.1-2: 115-138.
 +
 +
;Williams, Elizabeth W., 2019. : "Queering Settler Romance: The Reparative Eugenic Landscape in Nora Strange's Kenyan Novels", ''Archiving Settler Colonialism: Culture, Space and Race''. Ed. Yu-ting Huang and Rebecca Weaver-Hightower. Abingdon: Routledge, 2019. 190-204 ??. ["Williams reads Nora Strange’s interwar romance novels as they archive settler preoccupation with white sexuality in a settled space. In Strange’s novels, a repressed and declining Britain needs the “Edenic paradise” of Kenya to let loose British sexual vitality. The Kenyan environment tests would-​be parents for their moral and physical fitness in producing good settler children and awakens healthy heterosexual desires to ready parents for reproductive duty."]
  
 
;Williams, Jeffrey J., 2006. : "The Culture of Books: An Interview with Janice Radway." ''Minnesota Review: A Journal of Committed Writing.'' ns 65-66: 133-148. [http://www.theminnesotareview.org/journal/ns6566/iae_ns6566_cultureofreading.shtml]
 
;Williams, Jeffrey J., 2006. : "The Culture of Books: An Interview with Janice Radway." ''Minnesota Review: A Journal of Committed Writing.'' ns 65-66: 133-148. [http://www.theminnesotareview.org/journal/ns6566/iae_ns6566_cultureofreading.shtml]
Line 248: Line 267:
 
;Woodruff, Juliette, 1985. : 'A spate of words, full of sound & fury, signifying nothing: or, How to read in Harlequin', ''Journal of Popular Culture'', 19.2 :25-32.
 
;Woodruff, Juliette, 1985. : 'A spate of words, full of sound & fury, signifying nothing: or, How to read in Harlequin', ''Journal of Popular Culture'', 19.2 :25-32.
  
;Wu, Huei-Hsia. 2006. : 'Gender, Romance Novels and Plastic Sexuality in the United States: A Focus on Female College Students', ''Journal of International Women’s Studies'', 8.1: 125-134.[http://www.bridgew.edu/SoAS/jiws/Nov06/RomanceNovels.pdf]
+
;Wu, Huei-Hsia. 2006. : 'Gender, Romance Novels and Plastic Sexuality in the United States: A Focus on Female College Students', ''Journal of International Women’s Studies'', 8.1: 125-134. [https://www.academia.edu/521159/Gender_Romance_Novels_and_Plastic_Sexuality_in_the_United_States_A_Focus_on_Female_College_Students?email_work_card=title] [https://vc.bridgew.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1353&context=jiws]
  
;Wu, Huei-Hsia. 2007. : “Reading Romance Novels and Female Sexuality among American Heterosexual and Lesbian College Students.” ''The International Journal of Diversity in Organisations, Communities and Nations'' 6.6: 31-38. [http://ijd.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.29/prod.433 Abstract]
+
;Wu, Huei-Hsia. 2007. : “Reading Romance Novels and Female Sexuality among American Heterosexual and Lesbian College Students.” ''The International Journal of Diversity in Organisations, Communities and Nations'' 6.6: 31-38. [http://ijd.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.29/prod.433 Abstract]  
  
 
;Wyatt, Neal, Georgine Olsen, Kristen Ramsdell, Joyce Saricks, and Lynne Welch, 2008. : 'Core Collections in Genre Studies: Romance Fiction 101', ''Reference & User Services Quarterly'', [http://rusq.org/category/issues/47-no-2/ 47.2]: 120-126.[http://rusq.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/47n2/PDFs/alert_collect.pdf]
 
;Wyatt, Neal, Georgine Olsen, Kristen Ramsdell, Joyce Saricks, and Lynne Welch, 2008. : 'Core Collections in Genre Studies: Romance Fiction 101', ''Reference & User Services Quarterly'', [http://rusq.org/category/issues/47-no-2/ 47.2]: 120-126.[http://rusq.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/47n2/PDFs/alert_collect.pdf]

Latest revision as of 21:05, 28 September 2019

Items with the "**" have not been personally checked. This means that the details given in the entry may not be entirely accurate.

From this page you may return to the main Romance Scholarship page or go directly to


Contents

T

Taddeo, Julie Anne, 2012. 
"Corsets of Steel: Steampunk's Reimagining of Victorian Femininity," in Steaming Into a Victorian Future: A Steampunk Anthology, ed. Julie Anne Taddeo and Cynthia J. Miller (Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow), pp. 43-63. Excerpt
Talbot, Mary M., 1995. 
Fictions at Work: Language and Social Practice in Fiction, (New York: Longman). [See Chapter 4, entitled "Escaping into Romance," pages 75-116. In this chapter she analyses, at some length, Kate Walker's No Gentleman.]
Talbot, Mary M., 1997. 
“‘An Explosion Deep inside Her’: Women’s Desire and Popular Romance Fiction,” in Language and Desire: Encoding Sex, Romance, and Intimacy, ed. Keith Harvey and Celia Shalom (London: Routledge), pp. 106–22.** Excerpt and a much longer excerpt [Talbot examines "the representation of women's desire in two [...] romances (No Guarantees (1990) by Robyn Donald and Passionate Awakening (1990) by Diana Hamilton)" (107).]
Tanner, David, 2016. 
“Literary Success and Popular Romantic Fiction: Ethel M. Dell, a Case Study.” The Book World: Selling and Distributing British Literature, 1900-1940. Ed. Nicola Wilson. Leiden: Brill, 2016. 83-94. Excerpt
Tapper, Olivia, 2014. 
"Romance and Innovation in Twenty-First Century Publishing." Publishing Research Quarterly. Online First. 9 May 2014. Abstract
Tatlock, Lynne, 2012. 
German Writing, American Reading: Women and the Import of Fiction, 1866-1917 (Columbus: Ohio State UP). [See Chapter 4, entitled "The German Art of the Happy Ending: Embellishing and Expanding the Boundaries of Home."] [1].
Taylor, Helen, 1989. 
'Romantic Readers" in From My Guy to Sci-Fi;Genre and Women's Writing in the Postmodern World., ed. Helen Carr, (London: Pandora), pp. 58-77.**
Taylor, Jessica, 2007. 
"And You Can Be My Sheikh: Gender, Race, and Orientalism in Contemporary Romance Novels." Journal of Popular Culture 40.6: 1032-1051.
Taylor, Jessica. 2014. 
"Romance and the Female Gaze Obscuring Gendered Violence in The Twilight Saga." Feminist Media Studies 14, no. 3: 388-402.
Taylor, Jessica, 2016. 
'Love the Market: Discourses of Passion and Professionalism in Romance Writing Communities', Romance Fiction and American Culture: Love as the Practice of Freedom? Ed. William A. Gleason and Eric Murphy Selinger (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate), pp. 273-295.
Taylor, Jessica, 2018. 
'Animating Creative Selves: Pen Names as Property in the Careers of Canadian and American Romance Writers', American Ethnologist 45.1: 112-123. Abstract
Tegan, Mary Beth, 2007. 
'Becoming Both Poet and Poem: Feminists Repossess the Romance.' in Empowerment versus Oppression: Twenty First Century Views of Popular Romance Novels. ed. Sally Goade, (Newcastle, U.K.:Cambridge Scholars Pub.) pp.231-263.
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 1999. 
'Shanghaied By Sheiks: Orientalism and hybridity in women's romance writing', Olive Pink Society Bulletin, 11.1: 12–21.
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2003. 
'The Romance of White Nations: Imperialism, Popular Culture and National Histories', in After the Imperial Turn: Thinking with and through the Nation, ed. Antoinette Burton (Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press), pp. 279-292. Excerpt
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2004. 
'Romancing the Raj: Interracial Relations in Anglo-Indian Romance Novels', History of Intellectual Culture, 4.1.[2]
Teo, Hsu-Ming. 2007. 
'Orientalism and Mass Market Romance Novels in the Twentieth Century,' in Edward Said: The Legacy of a Public Intellectual, ed Ned Curthoys and Debjani Ganguly (Carlton Vic.: Melbourne University Press), pp. 241-262. Excerpt
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2010. 
'Historicizing The Sheik: Comparisons of the British Novel and the American Film', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 1.1. [3] [Also available as a pdf.]
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2012. 
' "Bertrice teaches you about history, and you don't even mind!": History and Revisionist Historiography in Bertrice Small's The Kadin,' New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 21-32.
Teo, Hsu-Ming. 2012. 
Desert passions: Orientalism and romance novels. Austin: University of Texas Press.
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2014. 
'“We have to learn to love imperially”: Love in Late Colonial and Federation Australian Romance Novels', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 4.2. [4] [Also available as a pdf.]
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2016. 
"Imperial Affairs: The British Empire and the Romantic Novel, 1890-1939", New Directions in Popular Fiction: Genre, Distribution, Reproduction, ed. Ken Gelder. (Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan), pp. 87-110. Excerpt
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2018. 
"The contemporary Anglophone romance genre." Oxford research encyclopedia of literature. Ed. Paula Rabinowitz. Oxford, UK : Oxford University Press. 25 pages. Summary
Teo, Hsu-Ming, 2016. 
'Orientalism, Freedom, and Feminism in Popular Romance Culture', Romance Fiction and American Culture: Love as the Practice of Freedom? Ed. William A. Gleason and Eric Murphy Selinger (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate), pp. 181-203.
Tetel Andresen, Julie, 1999. 
'Postmodern Identity (Crisis): Confessions of a Linguistic Historiographer and Romance Writer', in Romantic Conventions, see above, pp. 173-86.
Therrien, Kathleen, 2012. 
'Straight to the Edges: Gay and Lesbian Characters and Cultural Conflict in Popular Romance Fiction,' New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 164-177.
Thomas, Audrey, 1986. 
'A Fine Romance, My Dear, This Is,' Canadian Literature, no. 108:5-12.
Thomas, Glen, 2008. 
' "And I Deliver": An Interview with Emma Darcy.' Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies 22.1: 113-26.
Thomas, Glen, 2007. 
'Australia’s Best Romance Novelist: Emma Darcy.' in Beautiful Things in Popular Culture. ed. Alan McKee, (New York: Blackwell) pp. 64–78. Excerpt
Thomas, Glen & Bridie James, 2006. 
'The Australian Romance Industry: A Study of Reading and Writing Romance.' in The Reinvention of Everyday Life. ed. Howard McNaughton & Adam Lam, (Canterbury, NZ: U of Canterbury Press) pp. 164–74.
Thomas , Glen, 2007. 
'Romance: The Perfect Creative Industry? A Case Study of Harlequin-Mills and Boon Australia.' in Empowerment versus Oppression: Twenty First Century Views of Popular Romance Novels. ed. Sally Goade, (Newcastle, U.K.:Cambridge Scholars Pub.) pp. 20-29.
Thomas, Glen, 2012. 
'Happy Readers or Sad Ones? Romance Fiction and the Problems of the Media Effects Model,' New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 206-217.
Thompson, Anne Booth, 2005. 
'Rereading Fifties Teen Romance: Reflections on Janet Lambert', The Lion and the Unicorn, 29.3:373-96. Abstract
Thompson, M., P. Koski, and L. Holyfield, 1997. 
"Romance and Agency: An Argument Revisited." Sociological Spectrum 17.4: 437-51.
Thurlow, Michelle. 2010. 
"'A Whisper of Satin': The Infant Dress Leitmotif in Beverly Lewis's 'Heritage of Lancaster County' Series." Journal of the Center for Mennonite Writing 2, no. 4: 1-14. [5]
Thurston,Carol M., 1985. 
‘Popular Historical Romances: Agent for Social Change? An Exploration of Methodologies’, Journal of Popular Culture, 19:1: 35-45. Excerpt
Thurston, Carol, 1987. 
The Romance Revolution: Erotic Novels for Women and the Quest for a New Sexual Identity (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press).
Tidwell, Christy, 2016. 
"“A Little Wildness”: Negotiating Relationships between Human and Nonhuman in Historical Romance", Creatural Fictions: Human-Animal Relationships in Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Literature, Ed. David Herman, Palgrave Studies in Animals and Literature (Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan). 151-171. Excerpt Abstract [Focuses on Bertrice Small's Sky O'Malley and Patricia Gaffney's Wild at Heart]
Timson, Beth S., 1983 
‘The Drug Store Novel: Popular Romantic Fiction and the Mainstream Tradition’, Studies in Popular Culture, 6: 88-96. Excerpt
Tobin-McClain, Lee, 2000. 
"Paranormal Romance: Secrets of the Female Fantastic." Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 11.3 [43]: 294-306. A version was available online here but it has now been removed. It can still be viewed, however, via the Internet Archive.
Toscano, Angela, 2012. 
“A Parody of Love: the Narrative Uses of Rape in Popular Romance.” Journal of Popular Romance Studies 2.2.[6]
Toscano, Angela, 2019. 
"The Idolatry of the Real: Form, Formula, and Happy Endings in Romance Literature", Chapter 8, Iconoclasm: The Breaking and Making of Images, edited by Rachel F. Stapleton and Antonio Viselli. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, pp. 173-192.
Trachsel, Mary, 1997. 
'Horse Stories and Romance Fiction: Variants or Alternative Texts of Female Identity?', Reader: Essays in Reader-Oriented Theory, Criticism, and Pedagogy , 38-39: 20-41.
Treacher, Amal, 1988. 
‘What is Life Without my Love: Desire and Romantic Fiction’, in Sweet Dreams – Sexuality, Gender and Popular Fiction, ed. Susannah Radstone (London: Lawrence & Wishart), pp. 73-90. First page. [Takes Sally Wentworth's Say Hello to Yesterday as a case study.]
Trower, Shelley, Amy Tooth Murphy and Graham Smith, 2019. 
‘“Me mum likes a book, me dad’s a newspaper man”: Reading, gender and domestic life in “100 Families”’, Participations 16.1: 554-581. [7]
Turnbull, Sue. 2002. 
"'Nice Dress, Take It Off': Crime, Romance and the Pleasure of the Text." International Journal of Cultural Studies 5, no. 1: 67-82. (about Janet Evanovich)
Turner, Ellen, 2014. 
'The Sheik Returns: Imitations and Parodies of the Desert Romance', in Hype: Bestsellers and Literary Cultures, ed. Jon Helgason, Sara Kärrholm, and Ann Steiner (Lund, Sweden: Nordic Academic Press), pp. 185-202.[8]
Turner, Ellen, 2015. 
'E. M. Hull's Camping in the Sahara: desert romance meets desert reality', Studies in Travel Writing, online first. Abstract
Turner, Katherine. 2017. 
"Daphne Du Maurier's Mary Anne: Rewriting the Regency Romance as Feminist History." University of Toronto Quarterly: A Canadian Journal of the Humanities, vol. 86, no. 4, pp. 54-77.Abstract
Ty, Eleanor, 1994. 
'Desire and Temptation: Dialogism and the Carnivalesque in Category Romances', in A Dialogue of Voices: Feminist Literary Theory and Bakhtin, ed. Karen Hohne and Helen Wussow (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press), pp. 97-113. Excerpt


U

Uparkar, Shilpa, 2014. 
'Desi love stories: Harlequin Mills & Boon’s Indian enterprise.' Australasian Journal of Popular Culture 3.3: 321-333. Abstract
Uszkurat, Carol Ann, 1993. 
'Mid Twentieth Century Lesbian Romance: Reception and Redress', Outwrite: Lesbianism and Popular Culture, ed. Gabriele Griffin (London: Pluto Press), pp. 26-47.

V

Valeo, Christina A., 2012. 
'The Power of Three: Nora Roberts and Serial Magic,' New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 229-239.
Valeo, Christina A., 2012. 
'Crusie and the Con', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 2.2.[9]
Valovirta, Elina, 2019. 
"No Ordinary Love: The Romantic Formula of Stepsibling Erotica". Thinking with the Familiar in Contemporary Literature and Culture 'Out of the Ordinary', Ed. Joel Kuortti, Kaisa Ilmonen, Elina Valovirta, Janne Korkka (Leiden: Brill Rodopi), pp. 161-??. Abstract
Valverde, Mariana, 1985. 
Sex, Power and Pleasure (Toronto: Women's Press). [Mentions "formula romance" novels. Excerpt.]
van Lent, Peter, 1996. 
‘“Her Beautiful Savage”: The Current Sexual Image of the Native American Male’, Dressing in Feathers: The Construction of the Indian in American Popular Culture, ed. S. Elizabeth Bird (Boulder, Colorado: Westview), pp. 211-227. [This isn't just about romances, but it quotes from and discusses romances, including ones by Cassie Edwards and Madeline Baker.]
Veldman-Genz, Carole, 2012. 
'The More the Merrier? Transformations of the Love Triangle Across the Romance,' New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 108-120. Excerpt
Veldman-Genz, Carole, 2015. 
"Selling Gay Sex to Women: The Romance of M/M and M/M/F Romantica." Women & Erotic Fiction: Critical Essays on Genres, Markets & Readers. Ed. Kristen Phillips. Jefferson: McFarland, 2015. 133-149.
Veros, Vassiliki, 2012. 
"The Romance Reader and the Public Library." Australian Library Journal 61.4: 298-306. Abstract
Veros, Vassiliki, 2015. 
"A Matter of Meta: Category Romance Fiction and the Interplay of Paratext and Library Metadata." Journal of Popular Romance Studies 5.1.[10]
Veros, Vassiliki, 2017. 
"Keepers: Marking the Value of the Books on my Shelves." Proceedings from the Document Academy 4.1, Article 4. [11]
Veros, Vassiliki, 2019. 
"Metatextual Conversations: The Exclusion/Inclusion of Genre Fiction in Public Libraries and Social Media Book Groups", Journal of the Australian Library and Information Association. Abstract [Added when online first and not yet included in a volume or officially paginated.]
Vitackova, Martina, 2018. 
"Representation of racial and sexual ‘others’ in Afrikaans popular romantic fiction by Sophia Kapp." Tydskrif vir letterkunde 55.1. 122-133. Abstract and link to pdf
Vivanco, Laura and Kyra Kramer, 2010. 
'There Are Six Bodies in This Relationship: An Anthropological Approach to the Romance Genre', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 1.1.[12] [Also available in pdf format.]
Vivanco, Laura, 2011. 
For Love and Money: The Literary Art of the Harlequin Mills & Boon Romance (Tirril, Penrith: Humanities-Ebooks). Abstract and more details and Excerpt.
Vivanco, Laura, 2012. 
'One Ring to Bind Them: Ring Symbolism in Popular Romance Fiction', New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 99-107. Visible via Google Books
Vivanco, Laura, 2012. 
'Jennifer Crusie's Literary Lingerie', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 2.2 (2012). [13]. [Also available in pdf format.]
Vivanco, Laura, 2012. 
'Feminism and Early Twenty-First Century Harlequin Mills & Boon Romances', Journal of Popular Culture 45.5: 1060–1089. Excerpt
Vivanco, Laura, 2013. 
'Georgette Heyer: The Nonesuch of Regency Romance', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 3.2. [14]. [Also available in pdf format.]
Vivanco, Laura, 2016. 
Pursuing Happiness: Reading American Romance as Political Fiction (Tirril, Penrith: Humanities-Ebooks). Abstract and more details
Vivanco, Laura, 2017. 
"'A Place We All Dream About': Greece in Mills & Boon Romances." Greece in British Women’s Literary Imagination, 1913-2013. Ed. Eleni Papargyriou, Semele Assinder and David Holton. New York: Peter Lang, 2017. 81-98. Abstract
Voaden, Rosalynn, 1995. 
'The Language of Love: Medieval Erotic Vision and Modern Romance Fiction', in Romance Revisited , ed. Jackie Stacey and Lynne Pearce (New York: New York UP), pp. 78-88.

W

Wagner, Wendy, 2008. 
'Jennifer Crusie', Teaching American Literature: A Journal of Theory and Practice 2.2/3. [Formerly at [15]. This link no longer works but a pdf of the entire issue can be downloaded from [16]].
Wallace, Diana, 2005. 
The Woman's Historical Novel: British Women Writers, 1900-2000. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan. Has the following sections about romance novels - "Captive Women: 'Jean Plaidy' and 'Victoria Holt'","Gender as Masquerade; Georgette Heyer's Mask of Romance", "Selling Women's History: Popular Historical Fiction in the 1970s" [Abstract, Index and Excerpt available from Palgrave Macmillan.]
Waller, Philip, 2006. 
Writers, Readers, and Reputations: Literary Life in Britain 1870-1918. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [See chapters "In Cupid's Chains: Charles Garvice" (681-701) and "Hymns and Heroines: Florence Barclay" (702-728). Excerpt]
Wardrop, Stephanie, 1995. 
"The Heroine is Being Beaten: Freud, Sadomasochism, and Reading the Romance." Style 29: 459-73. Unpaginated and unofficial copy
Wardrop, Stephanie, 1997. 
'Last of the Red Hot Mohicans: Miscegenation in the Popular American Romance', MELUS, 22. 2, Popular Literature and Film: 61-74. Excerpt
Wareing, Shan, 1994. 
'And Then He Kissed Her: The Reclamation of Female Characters to Submissive Roles in Contemporary Fiction', in Feminist Linguistics in Literary Criticism, ed. Katie Wales, Essays and Studies, 47 (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer), pp. 117-36.
Warnes, Christopher, 2014. 
'Desired State: Black Economic Empowerment and the South African Popular Romance', Popular Culture in Africa: The Episteme of the Everyday, ed. Stephanie Newell and Onookome Okome (New York: Routledge), pp. 154-171. Excerpt
Washington, AlTonya, 2015. 
"An Indie Author in a Library World". Self-Publishing and Collection Development: Opportunities and Challenges for Libraries. Ed. Robert P. Holley. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press, 2015. 139-147.[17]
Watson, Daphne, 1995. 
Their Own Worst Enemies; Women Writers of Women's Fiction. (London: Pluto Press). Chapter on 'Two for the Price of One; the novels of Mills and Boon' pp. 75-94.
Weaver-Zercher, Valerie, 2012. 
'Tracing the Backstory of Amish Romance Novels', The Mennonite Quarterly Review 86.4: 409-36.
Weaver-Zercher, Valerie. 2013. 
Thrill of the Chaste: the Allure of Amish Romance Novels. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Excerpt
Wei, Po-Yu, Rick, 2018. 
‘“She is a Jade”: A Georgian Gaming Woman Re-imagined in Georgette Heyer’s Faro’s Daughter’, Crossings 9: 122-131.[18]
Weibel, Kathryn, 1977. 
Mirror Mirror: Images of Women Reflected in Popular Culture, (Garden City, New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday). [Romances are mainly discussed on pages 32-40.]
Weir, Angela, and Elizabeth Wilson, 1992.
"The Greyhound Bus Station in the Evolution of Lesbian Popular Culture." in New Lesbian Criticism: Literary and Cultural Readings ed. Sally Munt (New York: Columbia UP) pp. 95-113. .
Weisser, Susan Ostrov. 1994. 
'The Wonderful-Terrible Bitch Figure in Harlequin Novels', in Feminist Nightmares: Women at Odds: Feminism and the Problem of Sisterhood, ed. Susan Ostrov Weisser and Jennifer Fleischner (New York: New York University Press), pp. 269-82. **
Weisser, Susan Ostrov. 2013. 
The Glass Slipper: Women and Love Stories. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP.
Wendell, Sarah, 2012. 
' "You call me a bitch like that's a bad thing": Romance Criticism and Redefining the Word "Bitch",' New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 178-194.
Westman, Karin E., 2003. 
'A Story of Her Weaving: The Self-Authoring Heroines of Georgette Heyer's Regency Romance', in Doubled Plots: Romance and History, see above, pp. 165-184. Excerpt
Weston, Louise C., and Josephine A. Ruggiero, 1978. 
"Male-Female Relationships in Best-Selling 'Modern Gothic' Novels." Sex Roles 4.5: 647-55. Abstract
Wherry, Maryan, 2014. 
'More than a Love Story: The Complexities Of the Popular Romance.' The Bloomsbury Introduction to Popular Fiction, ed. Christine Berberich (London: Bloomsbury), pp. 53-69. Excerpt
Whissell, Cynthia, 1994. 
'Objective analysis of text: I. A comparison of adventure and romance novels', Perceptual and Motor Skills, 79 (3.2): 1567-1570. Abstract
Whissell, Cynthia, 1996. 
‘Mate Selection in Popular Women's Fiction’, Human Nature, 7: 427-447. **
Whissell, Cynthia, 1998. 
'The Formula Behind Women's Romantic Formula Fiction (Statistical survey of 50 Harlequin-Presents novels)', Arachne, 5.1:89-119.
Whitehead, Frances, 1992. 
'Love Makes the World Go Round (?): The Romantic Novel as a Publishing Phenomenon', Logos 3.2: 62-68. Reprinted in The Cottage by the Highway and Other Essays on Publishing: 25 Years of Logos, ed Angus Phillips (Leiden: Koninklijke Brill NV, 2015): 20-30. Excerpt
Whitsitt, Novian, 2002. 
"Islamic-Hausa Feminism and Kano Market Literature: Qur'anic Reinterpretation in the Novels of Balaraba Yakubu." Research in African Literatures 33.2: 119-136. Excerpt
Whitsitt, Novian, 2003. 
"Islamic-Hausa Feminism Meets Northern Nigerian Romance: The Cautious Rebellion of Bilkisu Funtuwa." African Studies Review 46.1: 137-53. Unofficial, unpaginated version
Whitsitt, Novian, 2003. 
"Hausa Women Writers Confronting the Traditional Status of Women in Modern Islamic Society: Feminist Thought in Nigerian Popular Fiction." Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 22.2: 387-408.
Whyte, Tamara, 2012. 
' "A consummation devoutly to be wished": Shakespeare in Popular Historical Romance Fiction,' New Approaches to Popular Romance Fiction: Critical Essays, ed. Sarah S. G. Frantz and Eric Murphy Selinger (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland), pp. 218-228.
Wilbur, Shawn P., 2000. 
"An Archaeology of Cyberspaces: Virtuality, Community, Identity", The Cybercultures Reader, Ed. David Bell and Barbara M. Kennedy (London: Routledge), pp. 45-55. Excerpt [Wilbur discusses a "voice-based 'virtual village' created by Harlequin Romance in conjunction with one of its book series" - see pages 51-53. The article was first published in Internet Culture, ed David Porter (London: Routledge, 1997) and an excerpt of that version can be found here.]
Wilkins, Kim, 2016. 
'“Ravished by Vikings”: The Pre-modern and the Paranormal in Viking Romance Fiction', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 5.2 (15 July 2016).[19]
Williams, Clover, and Jean R. Freedman, 1995. 
"Shakespeare's Step-Sisters: Romance Novels and the Community of Women." in Folklore, Literature, and Cultural Theory: Collected Essays. ed. Cathy Lynn Preston (New York, NY: Garland) pp. 135-168. Excerpt
Williams, Clover, 1998. 
"Keepers of the Flame: The Romance Novel and Its Fans." Lore and Language 16.1-2: 115-138.
Williams, Elizabeth W., 2019. 
"Queering Settler Romance: The Reparative Eugenic Landscape in Nora Strange's Kenyan Novels", Archiving Settler Colonialism: Culture, Space and Race. Ed. Yu-ting Huang and Rebecca Weaver-Hightower. Abingdon: Routledge, 2019. 190-204 ??. ["Williams reads Nora Strange’s interwar romance novels as they archive settler preoccupation with white sexuality in a settled space. In Strange’s novels, a repressed and declining Britain needs the “Edenic paradise” of Kenya to let loose British sexual vitality. The Kenyan environment tests would-​be parents for their moral and physical fitness in producing good settler children and awakens healthy heterosexual desires to ready parents for reproductive duty."]
Williams, Jeffrey J., 2006. 
"The Culture of Books: An Interview with Janice Radway." Minnesota Review: A Journal of Committed Writing. ns 65-66: 133-148. [20]
Williamson, Val, 1998. 
'Labour of Love: Gender and the Delivery of the Nineties Mills & Boon "Medical"', Medical Fictions, ed. Nickianne Moody, & Julia Hallam (Liverpool: Liverpool John Moores University and the Association for Research in Popular Fictions), pp. 103-116. [Available here but when last checked (17 June 2014) the pagination was not exactly as in the original.]
Willinsky, John and R. Mark Hunniford, 1993. 
'Reading the Romance Younger: The Mirrors and Fears of a Preparatory Literature', Texts of Desire: Essays on Fiction, Femininity and Schooling, ed. Linda Christian-Smith. (London: Falmer), pp. 87-105. Excerpt
Wilt, Judith, 2014. 
Women Writers and the Hero of Romance. Houndmills, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. [See in particular the chapter on "Exotic Romance: The Doubled Hero in The Scarlet Pimpernel and The Sheik."] Excerpt
Wintle, Sarah, 1996. 
'The Sheik: What Can be Made of a Daydream', Women: A Cultural Review 7.3: 291-302. Excerpt
Wirtén, Eva Hemmungs, 1998. 
' "They Seek It Here, They Seek It There, They Seek It Everywhere": Looking for the "Global" Book', Canadian Journal of Communication, 23.2.[21]['this article uses Harlequin's Stockholm office as a case study for a closer look at just how Harlequin romances are transposed from one cultural context into another']. According to the author's website This is an abbreviated version of a chapter from her thesis, the details of, and a link for which, are provided on the page for dissertation abstracts.
Wirten, Eva Hemmungs, 2000. 
"Harlequin romances in Swedish: a case study in globalized publishing." Logos 11.4: 203-7.
Wogan-Browne, Jocelyn, 2004. 
“Virginity Always Comes Twice: Virginity and Profession, Virginity and Romance.” Maistresse of My Wit: Medieval Women, Modern Scholars. Eds. Louise D’Arcens and Juanita Feros Ruys. Turnhout: Brepols. 335-69.
Wood, Andrea, 2015. 
"Making the Invisible Visible: Lesbian Romance Comics for Women." Feminist Studies 41.2: 293-334. Excerpt
Wood, Christine V., 2014. 
'Tender Heroes and Twilight Lovers: Re-Reading the Romance in Mass-Market Pulp Novels, 1950–1965', Journal of Lesbian Studies 18.4: 372-392. Abstract
Wood, Helen, 2004. 
'What Reading the Romance Did for Us', European Journal of Cultural Studies, 7.2:147-54. [This is about the place of Radway's Reading the Romance in the history/development of cultural studies] Excerpt
Wood, Julia T., 2001. 
'The normalization of violence in heterosexual romantic relationships: Women's narratives of love and violence', Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 18.2: 239-261.** There is an abstract and a press release reporting Wood's findings.
Woodruff, Juliette, 1985. 
'A spate of words, full of sound & fury, signifying nothing: or, How to read in Harlequin', Journal of Popular Culture, 19.2 :25-32.
Wu, Huei-Hsia. 2006. 
'Gender, Romance Novels and Plastic Sexuality in the United States: A Focus on Female College Students', Journal of International Women’s Studies, 8.1: 125-134. [22] [23]
Wu, Huei-Hsia. 2007. 
“Reading Romance Novels and Female Sexuality among American Heterosexual and Lesbian College Students.” The International Journal of Diversity in Organisations, Communities and Nations 6.6: 31-38. Abstract
Wyatt, Neal, Georgine Olsen, Kristen Ramsdell, Joyce Saricks, and Lynne Welch, 2008. 
'Core Collections in Genre Studies: Romance Fiction 101', Reference & User Services Quarterly, 47.2: 120-126.[24]

Y

Young, Beth Rapp, 1997. 
"Accidental Authors, Random Readers, and the Art of Popular Romance." Paradoxa: Studies in World Literary Genres 3.1-2: 29-45.
Young, Erin S., 2010. 
'Escaping the “Time Bind”: Negotiations of Love and Work in Jayne Ann Krentz's “Corporate Romances”', Journal of American Culture 33.2: 92–106. Excerpt. Unofficial, unpaginated version.
Young, Erin S. 2011. 
"Flexible Heroines, Flexible Narratives: The Werewolf Romances of Kelley Armstrong and Carrie Vaughn." Extrapolation: A Journal Of Science Fiction And Fantasy 52.2: 204-226. Excerpt
Young, Erin S., 2016. 
'Saving China: The Transformative Power of Whiteness in Elizabeth Lowell's Jade Island and Katherine Stone's Pearl Moon', Romance Fiction and American Culture: Love as the Practice of Freedom? Ed. William A. Gleason and Eric Murphy Selinger (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate), pp. 205-221.

Z

Zakreski, Patricia, 2012. 
'Tell Me Lies: Lying, Storytelling, and the Romance Novel as Feminist Fiction', Journal of Popular Romance Studies 2.2.[25]
Zeiger, Melissa F., 2014. 
"'Less Than Perfect': Negotiating Breast Cancer in Popular Romance Novels." Tulsa Studies In Women's Literature 33, no. 1: 107-128. Abstract and the abstract at another location
Zhou, Yanyan, Bryant Paul and Ryland Sherman, 2017. 
"Still a Hetero-Gendered World: A Content Analysis of Gender Stereotypes and Romantic Ideals in Chinese Boy Love Stories." Sex Roles. Abstract
Zidle, Abby, 1999. 
'From Bodice-Ripper to Baby-Sitter: The New Hero in Mass-Market Romance', in Romantic Conventions, see above, pp. 23-34. Excerpt