Bell, Michael (1992), ‘Narration as Action: Goethe’s “Bekenntnisse Einer Schonen Seele” and Angela Carter’s Nights at the Circus’, German Life and Letters, 45, January, 16-32.
Bennett, Catherine (1995), ‘Hype and Heritage’, Guardian, 22 September, 2-4.
Berry, Philippa (1994), ‘The Burning Glass: Paradoxes of Feminist Revelation in Speculum’ in Burke, Schor and Whitford (eds), 229-46.
Bristow, Joseph and Trev Lynn Broughton (eds) (1997), The Infernal Desires of Angela Carter: Fiction, Femininity, Feminism, Essex: Longman.
Britzolakis, Christina (1995), ‘Angela Carter’s Fetishism’, Textual Practice, 9:3, 459-76.
Brooks, Richard and Peter Beaumont, Observer, 1 December 1991, 3.
Bryant, Sylvia (1990), ‘Re-constructing Oedipus Through “Beauty and the Beast”’, Criticisms: A Quarterly for Literature and the Arts, 31:4, Autumn, 439-53.
Callil, Carmen and Lorna Sage (1993), ‘In Praise of Angela Carter’, talk at Cheltenham Festival, 16 October.
Cameron, Deborah (ed.) (1990), The Feminist Critique of Language: A Reader, London and New York: Routledge.
Campbell Dixon, Anne (1987), ‘Mae West Would Have Approved’, Daily Telegraph, 31 July.
Cartmell, Deborah, I. Q. Hunter, Heidi Kaye and Imelda Whelehan (eds) (1996), Pulping Fictions: Consuming Culture Across the Literature/Media Divide, London and Chicago: Pluto Press.
Cartmell, Deborah, I. Q. Hunter, Heidi Kaye and Imelda Whelehan (eds) (1998), Sisterhoods: Across the Literature/Media Divide, London and Sterling, Virginia: Pluto Press.
Castell, David (1984), Review of The Company of Wolves, Daily Telegraph, November, quoted in Anwell (1988).
Cholodenko, Alan (ed.) (1991), The Illusion of Life: Essays on Animation, Sydney: Power Publications.
Clapp, Susannah (1991), ‘On Madness, Men and Fairy-tales’, Independent on Sunday Review Supplement, 9 June, 26.
Clark, Robert (1987), ‘Angela Carter’s Desire Machine’, Women’s Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 14:2, 147-61.
Collick, John (1991), ‘Wolves Through the Window: Writing Dreams / Dreaming Films / Filming Dreams’, Critical Survey, 3:3, 283-9.
Coover, Robert (1994), ‘A Passionate Remembrance’, The Review of Contemporary Fiction, 14: 3, Fall, 9.
Cranny-Francis, Anne (1990), Feminist Fiction: Feminist Uses of Generic Fiction, Cambridge: Polity Press.
Crofts, Charlotte (1996), ‘Mirage Bombardment’, Times Literary Supplement, 8 November, 34.
Crofts, Charlotte (1998), ‘Curiously Downbeat Hybrid or Radical Retelling?: Neil Jordan’s and Angela Carter’s The Company of Wolves ’ in Cartmell, Hunter, Kaye and Whelehan (eds) (1998), 48-63.
Crofts, Charlotte (2003), Anagrams of Desire: Angela Carter's Writing for Radio, Film and Television (Manchester: Manchester University Press).
Crofts, Charlotte (2006), ‘“The Other of the Other”: Angela Carter’s “New-Fangled” Orientalism’ in Rebecca Munfod (ed.) Revising Angela Carter: Texts / Intertexts / Contexts (London: Palgrave Macmillan), 87-110.
Cunningham, Valentine (1995), ‘Roll Up for the Necrophiliacs’ Party’, Observer, 19 February, 17.
Day, Aidan (1998), Angela Carter: The Rational Glass, Manchester and New York, Manchester University Press.
Dearman, Glyn (1992), Angela Carter Obituary, Times, 20 February.
Donelly, Frances (1987), ‘Edinburgh by Carter and Son’, Observer, 15-21 August, 85.
Duncker, Patricia (1984), ‘Re-imagining the Fairy Tales: Angela Carter’s Bloody Chambers’, Literature and History, 10:1, Spring, 3-14.
Engstrom, John (1988), ‘Bewitching Wit’, Boston Globe, 28 October, 51-62.
Erens, Patricia (ed.) (1990), Issues in Feminist Film Criticism, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
Evans, Kim and Angela Carter (1992), Post production script of Angela Carter’s Curious Room, Omnibus, BBC Music and Arts Department archive, part published as ‘The Granada, Tooting’ in Carter (1997), 400.
Fernihough, Anne (1997), ‘“Is She Fact or Is She Fiction?”: Angela Carter and the Enigma of Woman’, Textual Practice, 11:1, 89-107.
Ferrell, Robyn (1991), ‘Life-threatening Life: Angela Carter and the Uncanny’ in Cholodenko (ed.), 131-44.
Fisher, Susan (2001), 'The Mirror of the East: Angela Carter and Japan' in Susan Fisher (ed.), Nostalgic Journeys: Literary Pilgrammages Between Japan and the West, Vancouver: Institute for Asian Reseach, University of British Columbia, 165-74.
Forgan, Liz (1991), ‘Sacred Cows on C4’, Times, 5 December.
French, Philip (1984), ‘Rosaleen and the Wolves’, Observer, 23 September, 9.
Gallop, Jane (1982), Feminism and Psychoanalysis: The Daughter’s Seduction, London: Macmillan, 58.
Gamble, Sarah (1997), Angela Carter: Writing From the Front Line, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Gamman, Lorraine and Margaret Marshment (eds) (1988), The Female Gaze: Women as Viewers of Popular Culture, London: Women’s Press.
Gerrard, Nicci (1989), Into the Mainstream: How Feminism Has Changed Women’s Writing, London: Pandora.
Gibbs, Jeanne K. (1992), ‘Wise Children’, The Review of Contemporary Fiction, 12, Summer, 195-6.
Gorra, Michael (1987), ‘Saints and Strangers’, The Hudson Review, 40, Spring, 136-48.
Gray, John (1997), ‘Time to Get Rid of the Crime of Blasphemy’, Daily Telegraph, 12 August.
Grossman, Michele (1988), ‘“Born to Bleed”: Myth, Pornography and Romance in Angela Carter’s “The Bloody Chamber”’, The Minnesota Review, 30/31, Spring, 148-60.
Haase, Donald P. (1990), ‘Is Seeing Believing?: Proverbs and the Film Adaptation of a Fairy Tale’, Proverbium, 7, 89-104.
Haffenden, John (1985), Novelists in Interview, London: Methuen, 76-96.
Hanson, Clare (1988), ‘Each Other: Images of Otherness in the Short Fiction of Doris Lessing, Jean Rhys and Angela Carter’, Journal of the Short Story in English, 10, Spring, 67-82.
Hanson, Clare (ed.) (1989), Re-reading the Short Story, London: Macmillan.
Herbert, Hugh (1991), ‘A Slice of the Action that Was Pie in the Sky’, Guardian, 4 December, 34.
Hill, Joanne (1987), ‘Dream Machines’, City Life, 9-23 October, 12.
Holden, Kate (1985), ‘Women’s Writing and the Carnivalesque’, Literature Teaching Politics, 4, 5-15.
Jordan, Elaine (1990), ‘Enthralment: Angela Carter’s Speculative Fictions’ in Linda Anderson (ed.), Plotting Change: Contemporary Women’s Fiction, London: Edward Arnold, 19-40.
Jordan, Elaine (1992), ‘The Dangers of Angela Carter’ in Isobel Armstrong (ed.), New Feminist Discourses, London: Routledge, 119-31.
Jordan, Elaine (1994), ‘The Dangerous Edge’ in Sage (ed.), 189-215.
Kappeler, Susanne (1986), The Pornography of Representation, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Katsavos, Anna (1994), ‘An Interview with Angela Carter’ in The Review of Contemporary Fiction, 14:3, Autumn, 11-17.
Kearns, George (1989), ‘History and Games’, The Hudson Review, 42:2, Summer, 335-44.
Keenan, Sally (1997), ‘Angela Carter’s The Sadeian Woman: Feminism as Treason’ in Bristow and Broughton (eds), 132-148.
Kemp, Peter (1991), ‘Magical History Tour’, Sunday Times, Section 6, 9 June, 6-7.
Kenyon, Olga (1988), Women Novelists Today: A Survey of English Writing in the Seventies and Eighties, Brighton: Harvester.
Landon, Brooks (1986), ‘Eve at the End of the World: Sexuality and the Reversal of Expectations in Novels by Joanna Russ, Angela Carter and Thomas Berger’ in Donald Palumbo (ed.), Erotic Universe: Sexuality and Fantastic Literature, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 61-74.
Laye, Mike (1986), ‘Flights of Fancy in Balham’, Observer, 9 November.
Lee, Hermione (1994), ‘“A Room of One’s Own” or a Bloody Chamber?: Angela Carter and Political Correctness’ in Sage (ed.), 308-320.
Lewallen, Avis (1988), ‘Wayward Girls But Wicked Women?: Female sexuality in Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber’ in Gary Day and Clive Bloom (eds), Perspectives on Pornography: Sexuality in Film and Literature, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 144-58.
Lokke, Kari E. (1988), ‘Bluebeard and The Bloody Chamber: the Grotesque of Self-parody and Self-assertion’, Frontiers: A Journal of Women’s Studies, 10:1, 7-12.
Magrs, Paul (1997), ‘Boys Keep Swinging: Angela Carter and the Subject of Men’ in Bristow and Broughton (eds), 184-197.
Makinen, Merja (1992), ‘Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber and the Decolonization of Feminine Sexuality’, Feminist Review, 42, Autumn, 2-15.
Malcolm, Derek (1984), ‘A Furry Tale for Grown-ups’, Guardian, 20 September, 11.
Mansfield, Paul (1990), ‘Tell-tale Sisters’, Guardian, 25 October, 32.
Mars-Jones, Adam (1984a), ‘Nights at the Circus’, Times Literary Supplement, 28 September, 1083.
Mars-Jones, Adam (1984b), Writers in Conversation, London: ICA Video.
Matus, Jill (1991), ‘Blonde, Black and Hottentot Venus: Context and Critique in Angela Carter’s Black Venus’, Studies in Short Fiction, 28, Autumn, 467-76.
McAsh, Iain F. (1984), ‘Wolves at the Palace’, Films, 4:9, September, 5.
McDowell, Margaret B. (1986), ‘Angela Carter’ in Contemporary Novelists, London: St James Press, 173-75.
McEwan, Ian (1984), ‘Sweet Smell of Excess’, Sunday Times Magazine, 9 September, 42-4.
McHale, Brian (1987), Postmodernist Fiction, New York: Methuen.
Mckee Charnas, Suzy (1990), ‘Boobs’ in Tuttle (ed.), 18-38.
Michael, Magali Cornier (1994), ‘Angela Carter’s Nights at the Circus: an Engaged Feminism Via Subversive Postmodern Strategies’, Contemporary Literature, 35, Autumn, 492-521.
Mills, Sara, Lynne Pearce, Sue Spaull, and Elaine Millard (1989), Feminist Readings/ Feminists Reading, Hemel Hempsted: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
Monteith, Moria (ed.) (1986), Women’s Writing: A Challenge to Theory, Brighton: Harvester.
Morgan-Griffiths, Lauris (1990), ‘Well Wicked Times by Word of Mouth,’ Observer, 21 October.
Mortimer, John (1982), ‘The Stylish Prime of Miss Carter,’ Sunday Times, 24 January, 36.
Moyes, Jojo (1997), ‘Pregnant With Meaning - or a Slight on Motherhood?’, Independent, 11 September, 3.
Perino, Joy (dir) (1990), ‘The Kitchen Child’, Short and Curlies, Channel 4, 30 June.
Punter, David (1984), ‘Angela Carter: Supersessions of the Masculine’, Critique: Studies in Modern Fiction, 25:4, 209-22.
Punter, David (1980), The Literature of Terror: A History of Gothic Fictions from 1764 to the Present Day, London: Longman.
Pym, John (1984), ‘If You Go Down to the Woods Today’, Financial Times, 21 September, 23.
Roe, Sue (ed.) (1987), Women Reading Women’s Writing, Brighton: Harvester.
Rose, Ellen Cronan (1983), ‘Through the Looking Glass: When Women Tell Fairy Tales’ in Abel, Elizabeth, Marianne Hirsch and Elizabeth Langland (eds), The Voyage In: Fictions of Female Development, Hanover: University Press of New England, 209-43.
Rowe, Karen E. (1986), ‘Feminism and Fairy Tales’ in Zipes (ed.), 209-26.
Sage, Lorna (1973), ‘Angela Carter’ in Jay L. Halio (ed.), Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume. 14: British Novelists Since 1960, Detroit, Michigan: Bruccoli Clark, 205-12.
Sage, Lorna (1977), ‘The Savage Sideshow’, New Review, 39/40, 51-7.
Sage, Lorna (1992), Women in The House of Fiction, London: Macmillan.
Sage, Lorna (1994), Angela Carter: Writers and Their Work, Plymouth: Northcote House.
Sage, Lorna (ed.) (1994), Flesh and the Mirror: Essays on the Art of Angela Carter, London: Virago.
Sanders, Claire (1994), 'Quota Plan May Save Pre-modern Literature', Times Higher Education Supplement, 8 April, 6.
Sceats, Sarah (1997), ‘The Infernal Appetites of Angela Carter’ in Bristow and Broughton (eds), 100-15.
Schmidt, Ricarda (1989), ‘The Journey of the Subject in Angela Carter’s Fiction’, Textual Practice, 3:1, Spring, 56-75.
Sheets, Robin Ann (1991), ‘Pornography, Fairy Tales, and Feminism: Angela Carter’s “The Bloody Chamber’ in Tucker (1998), 96-118.
Sebastyen, Amanda (1987), ‘The Mannerist Marketplace’, New Socialist, March, 34-9.
Smith, Anne (1985), ‘Myths and the Erotic’, Women’s Review, 1, November, 28-9.
Smith, Barbara (1985), ‘From Classical Archetypes to Modern Stereotypes’, Spare Rib, November, 36-39.
Smith, Joan (1989), Misogynies, London: Faber and Faber.
Smith, Joan (1997), Introduction to Carter (1997), xii-iv.
Snitow, Ann (1989), ‘Angela Carter: Wild Thing’, The Village Voice Literary Supplement, June, 14-17.
Stanbrook, Alan (1991), ‘Snapshots on the Road to Blasphemy’, Daily Telegraph, 4 December, 16.
Suleiman, Susan Rubin (ed.) (1986), The Female Body in Western Culture: Contemporary Perspectives, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
Sutton, Paul and Anne White (1997), ‘Framing the Text: in The Company of Wolves’, ManuScript, 2:1, Summer, 27-38.
Tolley, Michael J. (1986), ‘Angela Carter’ in Curtis Smith (ed.), Twentieth-Century Science-Fiction Writers, 2nd Edition, London: St James Press, 122-3.
Tucker, Lindsey (ed.) (1998), Critical Essays on Angela Carter, New York: G. K. Hall and Co.
Turner, Rory P. B. (1987), ‘Subjects and Symbols: Transformations of Identity in Nights at the Circus’, Folklore Forum, 20:1/2, 39-60.
Tuttle, Lisa (ed.) (1990), Skin of the Soul: New Horror Stories by Women, London: Women’s Press.
Warner, Marina (1994), From the Beast to the Blonde: on Fairy Tales and Their Tellers, London: Chatto and Windus.
Waugh, Patricia (1986), ‘Winged Women and Werewolves: How Do We Read Angela Carter?’, Ideas and Production: A Journal in the History of Ideas, 4, 87-98.
Waugh, Patricia (1989), Feminine Fictions: Revisiting the Postmodern, London: Routledge.
Wilson, Robert Rawdon (1989), ‘Slip Page: Angela Carter In/Out/In the Postmodern Nexus’, Ariel: A Review of International English Literature, 20:4, October, 96-114.
Wisker, Gina (1984), ‘Woman Writer, Woman Reader, Male Institution: the Experience of a Contemporary Women’s Writing Seminar’, Literature Teaching Politics, 3, 18-31.
Wisker, Gina (1997), ‘The Revenge of the Living Doll: Angela Carter’s Horror Writing’ in Bristow et al (eds), 116-31.
Zipes, Jack (1983), The Trials and Tribulations of Little Red Riding Hood: Versions of the Tale in Sociocultural Context, London: Heinemann.