“Slave concubines and the Labor of Assimilation: John Gabriel Stedman’s Joanna and Toussaint Charbonneau’s Sacagawea” in Topic: The Washington and Jefferson Review 55, 2007.
“Intermarriage in Late-Eighteenth-Century British Literature: Currents in Assimilation and Exclusion” in Eighteenth-Century Life 31:2 (2007).
“The Shameful Allure of Sycorax and Wowski: Dramatic Prototypes of Sartje, the Hottentot Venus” in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Theatre Research 16:2 (2001)
“Behn’s Novel Investment in Oroonoko: Kingship, Slavery and Tobacco in English Colonialism” in South Atlantic Review 63:2 (1998).
“Conscience and the Disobedient Consort in the Closet Dramas of John Milton and Elizabeth Cary”: an analysis of the suggestive relationship between Elizabeth Cary’s closet drama The Tragedy of Mariam and John Milton’s Samson Agonistes, first appearing in Milton Studies (v. 36, 1998) and republished in Ashgate Critical Essays on Women Writers in England, 1550-1700, vol 6, ed Raber (Ashgate, 2009).
“England, Morocco and Global Geo-Political Upheaval”: An examination of the unusual alliance between Britain and Morocco at the inception of British colonialism in Envisioning an English Empire, eds. Appelbaum and Wood Sweet (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004).
“Everyday Africans: 18th-Century Pictorial Representations of 3 Perennial African Characters”: A study of differing theatrical representations of popular African characters in Performing the Everyday: The Culture of Genre in the 18th Century, ed Cavanaugh (University Press of Delaware, 2007).
“Hugh O’Neill and Early Modern Irish National Identity”: An examination of the intersection of early Irish printing, the Earl of Tyrone, and British politics in Anglo-Irish Identity, eds Bradbury and Valone (Bucknell University Press, 2008).
“Tortured Bodies and Unsettled Loyalties in Settle’s Moroccan Plays”: An inquiry into the correspondence between early modern Moroccan and British politics printed in Staging Pain in the Early Modern Theater, eds Allard and Mason (Ashgate 2009).