Publications:

BOOKS

Carnell, Rachel. Backlash: Libel, Impeachment and Populism in the Reign of Queen Anne (University of Virginia Press, 2020).

Bullard Rebecca and Rachel Carnell, eds. The Secret History in Literature, 1660-1820 (Cambridge University Press, 2017).

Carnell, Rachel. A Political Biography of Delarivier Manley (Pickering & Chatto, 2008).

Carnell, Rachel. Partisan Politics, Narrative Realism, and the Rise of the British Novel (New York: Palgrave, 2006).

Carnell, Rachel and Ruth Herman, eds. The Selected Works of Delarivier Manley, 5 volumes (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2005).


SCHOLARLY ARTICLES AND BOOK CHAPTERS

Carnell, Rachel. "Propaganda." Introduction and editor, virtue online issue of Eighteenth-Century
Fiction, topic: Propaganda, September 2018.*

Carnell, Rachel.  "Protesting the Exclusivity of the Public Sphere: Delarivier Manley's Examiner,"
       Women's Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain: 1690-1820s: The Long Eighteenth Century.
       Ed. Manushag Powell and Jennie Batchelor. The Edinburgh History of Women's Periodical
       Culture in Britain, Volume 1. (Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press, 2018), 153-64.*

Carnell, Rachel.  "Annotating Delariver Manley: Stripping Away Preconceptions of Gender and Genre,"
Editing Women's Writing, 1670-1840, Ed. Amy Culley and Anna Fitzer (London:  
Routledge, 2017), 60-75.*

Carnell, Rachel.  "Scholarship on Delarivier Manley: Past, Present, and Future."
         Literature Compass, November 2017. DOI: 10.1111/lic3.124.*

Carnell, Rachel. "Epilogue: Secret History in the Twenty-First Century." The Secret History in
Literature, 1660-1820, Ed. Rebecca Bullard and Rachel Carnell (Cambridge, Cambridge
University Press, 2017), 256-64.

Carnell, Rachel.  "Reading The Adventures of Rivella as Political Secret History." New Perspectives on
Delarivier Manley and Eighteenth Century Literature: Power, Sex, and Text Ed. Aleksondra
Hultquist and Elizabeth Matthews (Routledge, 2017), 15-29.*

Carnell, Rachel.  "Delarivier Manley and the Queen's Bench," Notes & Queries (2016) 63 (4): 582-4.
doi: 10.1093/notesj/gjw207.

Carnell, Rachel.  "Slipping from Secret History to Novel," Eighteenth-Century Fiction 28:1 (Fall 2015): 1-24.

Carnell, Rachel.  "Eliza Haywood and the Narratological Tropes of Secret History," Journal of Early
Modern Cultural Studies, 14:4 (2014): 101-21.

Carnell, Rachel. "Reading Austen's Lady Susan as Tory Secret History," Lumen 32 (2013): 1-16.

Carnell, Rachel. "Jacobite Ideology and the Emergence of British Self-Identity in Charlotte Lennox's Novels," The Age of Johnson, 22 (2012): 1-25.

Carnell, Rachel and Alison Hale.  "Romantic Transports: Tabitha Tenney's Female Quixotism in Transatlantic Context," Early American Literature 46:3 (Fall 2011), 517-39.

Carnell, Rachel. "Delarivier Manley's Possible Children by John Tilly," Notes & Queries, 252:4 (December 2007), 446-48.

Carnell, Rachel. "More Borrowing from Bellegarde in Delarivier Manley's Queen Zarah and the Zarazians,"
Notes & Queries, 249: 4 (December 2004), 377-379.

Carnell, Rachel. "The Very Scandal of Her Tea-Table: Eliza Haywood's Response to the Whig Public Sphere."
Presenting Gender: Sex Change in Early-Modern Culture.  Ed. Chris Mounsey  
(Bucknell, PA: Bucknell University Press, 2001), 255-273.

Carnell, Rachel. "Revising Tragic Conventions: Aphra Behn's Turn to the Novel." Studies in the Novel 31:2
(Summer 1999), 133-151.

Carnell, Rachel. "It's Not Easy Being Green: Gender and Friendship in Eliza Haywood's Political Periodicals." Eighteenth-Century Studies 32:2 (Winter 1998-99), 199-214.

Carnell, Rachel. "Feminism and the Public Sphere in Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall."
Nineteeenth-Century Literature 53:1 (June 1998.), 1-24.  Reprinted in
Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism (Detroit: Gale Research Publications, 2001).

Carnell, Rachel. "Clarissa's Treasonable Correspondence: Gender, Epistolary Politics, and the Public Sphere." Eighteenth-Century Fiction. 10:3 (April 1998), 269-287.  Reprinted in Passion and Virtue: Essays on the Novels of Samuel Richardson. Ed. David Blewett (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2001).

NEWSPAPER ARTICLES

¿Saving the Nation from Itself by Royal Veto Power.¿ The Globalist (10 February 2019).
https://www.theglobalist.com/united-kingdom-brexit-monarchy-queen-anne/

¿The Real Story Behind the Favourite.¿  Inside Sources (24 January 2019).
https://www.insidesources.com/the-real-story-behind-the-favourite/

¿For Centuries, Anonymous Insider Accounts Have Chipped Away at Ruling Regimes ¿ And Sometimes
Toppled Them.¿ The Conversation (theconversation.com13 September 2018). Reprinted in numerous newspapers and magazines, generating over 11,000 readers around the globe.

¿What Does the Secret Treaty of Dover Have to do With Donald Trump? Perhaps A Lot.¿ The Cleveland
Plain Dealer (Cleveland.com) 4 August 2018 online; 8 August 2018 print.

¿The Dangers as Seen in History of Donald Trump Trying to Suppress `Fire and Fury.¿¿ The Plain
Dealer (Cleveland.com) 21 January 2018.

¿Studies of the Real Nitty Gritty.¿  The Plain Dealer.  29 September 2000.


BOOK REVIEWS

The Fortunate Foundlings, by Eliza Haywood, ed. Carol Stewart. Women¿s Writing, forthcoming 2019.

Reading Austen in America, by Juliette Wells. Wintherthur Portfolio, 52:4 (Winter 2018): 259-60.

Defoe and the Whig Novel: A Reading of the Major Fiction, by Leon Guilhamet.  Digital Defoe, 5.1 (Fall 2013), 149-51.

Moral Reform in Comedy and Culture, 1696-1747 by Aparna Gollapudi, and
Dangerous Women, Libertine Epicures, and the Rise of Sensibility, 1670-1730 by Laura Linker.  Eighteenth-Century Fiction 25:4 (Summer 2013), 785-89

Clarissa: An Abridged Version, by Samuel Richardson, ed. Toni Bowers and John Richetti, The Scriblerian, 45:2 (Spring 2013), 251-53.

Force or Fraud: British Seduction Stories and the Problem of Resistance 1660-1760 by Toni Bowers.  Journal of British Studies 51:2 (April 2012), 442-43.

The Seduction Narrative in Britain, 1747-1800 by Katherine Binhammer. Eighteenth-Century Fiction 24:2 (Winter 2011-12), 388-90.

The Protestant Whore: Courtesan Narrative & Religious Controversy in England, 1680 -1750 by Alison Conway. The Scriblerian 44 No. 1 (Autumn 2011), 63-64.

The Power of the Passive Self in English Literature, 1640-1770 by Scott Paul Gordon.
Eighteenth-Century Fiction 15 (January 2003), 304-06.