The Recent Critical Heritage: a supplemental bibliography for your investigation

Barber, C.L. “‘Thou that beget’st him that did thee beget’: Transformation in Pericles and The Winter’s Tale.” Shakespeare Survey 22(1969): 59-67.

Dickey, Stephen. “Language and Role in Pericles.” English Literary Renaissance 16.3(1986): 550-556.

Ewbank, Inga-Stina. “‘My Name Is Marina’: The Language of Recognition.” Shakespeare's Styles: Essays in Honour of Kenneth Muir. Ed. Philip Edwards, Inga-Stina Ewbank, and G.K. Hunter. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1980. 111-30.

Kurland, Stuart M. “‘The Care ... of Subjects’ Good’: Pericles, James I, and the Neglect of Government.” Comparative Drama 30.2(1996): 220-44.

Jordan, Constance. “‘Eating the Mother’: Property and Propriety in Pericles.” Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies(1992): 331-53.

Leggatt, Alexander. “The Shadow of Antioch: Sexuality in Pericles, Prince of Tyre.” Parallel Lives: Spanish and English National Drama 1580-1680. Ed. Louise and Peter Fothergill-Payne. Lewisburg, PA: Associated UPs, 1991. 167-79.

Lewis, Anthony. “‘I feed on mother's flesh’: Incest and Eating in Pericles.” Essays in Literature 15(1988): 147-63.

Massai, Sonia. “From Pericles to Marina: ‘While Women Are to Be Had for Money, Love, or Importunity.’” Shakespeare Survey 51(1998): 67-77.

Masten, Jeffrey. “Representing Authority: Patriarchalism, Absolutism, and the Author on Stage.” Textual Intercourse: Collaboration, Authorship, and Sexualities in Renaissance Drama. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1997. 75-112.

Nevo, Ruth. “The Perils of Pericles.” The Undiscover'd Country: New Essays on Psychoanalysis and Shakespeare. Ed. B.J. Sokol. London: Free Assn., 1993. 150-78.

Relihan, Constance. “Liminal Geography: Pericles and the Politics of Place.” Philological Quarterly 71(1992): 281-99.