Works Cited
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- Borden, Lizzie. “Anarcha-Filmmaker: An Interview with Lizzie Borden,” by Alexandra Devon, Catchrina Tammaro, and (Glynis Sherwood. Kick It Over 18 (Spring 1987). Web.
- Borges, Jorge Luis. “Kafka and His Precursors.” Other Inquisitions: 1937–1952. Trans. Ruth L. C. Simms. Austin: U of Texas P, 1964. 106–08. Print.
- Committed. Dir. and Prod. Sheila McLaughlin and Lynne Tillman. First Run/Icarus Films, 1984; First Run Features, 1991. Film.
- Davidson, Sandra, and Catherine Parke. Interview by Catherine Parke with Professor Sandra Davidson, University of Missouri School of Journalism, 2009.
- Elliot, Edith Farmer. Look Back in Love: The True Story of Fame and Misfortunes of a Brilliant, Talented, Beautiful Actress and Her Family. Sequim: Gemaia, 1978. Print.
- Ellis, Michael. “Producer's Column.” Bucks County Playhouse playbill for The Chalk Garden. Elliot 198. Print.
- Epstein, Mark Epstein. Thoughts Without a Thinker: Psychotherapy from a Buddhist Perspective. New York: Basic, 1995. Print.
- Farmer, Frances. Will There Really Be a Morning? New York: Putnam, 1972. Print.
- Farmer, Frances.. “‘God Dies’: An Essay by Frances Farmer.” Ed. Cassandra Tate. HistoryLink.org Essay 4008. The Free Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History, 2002. Web.
- Frances. Dir. Graeme Clifford. Written by Eric Bergren, Christopher DeVore, and Nicholas Kazan. 1982. Republic Pictures Home Video, 1994. Videocassette.
- Frances. The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Web.
- Frances Farmer: Paradise Lost (A&E Biography). A&E Home Video, 2000. Citations from Catherine Parke transcript. Videocassette.
- Goeringer, Conrad C. “Searching for Frances Farmer, the Lost Atheist.” American Atheist: A Journal of Atheist News and Thought Autumn 2004: 7–20. Print.
- Johnson, Samuel. “Idler No. 84.” Idler and Adventurer. Ed. W.J. Bate, J. M. Bullitt, L. F. Powell. The Yale Edition of the Works of Samuel Johnson, vol. 2. New Haven: Yale UP, 1963. 2: 261–64. Print.
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- Kauffman, Jeffrey. “Shedding Light on Shadowland.” Home page, http://jeffreykauffman.net/, and Farmer link, http://jeffreykauffman.net/francesfarmer/. Web.
- Leyda, Jay. The Melville Log. 2 vols. New York: Gordian, 1969. Print.
- Overstreet, Harry Allen. A Guide to Civilized Leisure. 1934. Freeport: Books for Libraries P, 1969. Print.
- Postman, Neil. The End of Education: Redefining the Value of School. New York: Knopf, 1995. Print.
- Tate, Cassandra. “Frances Farmer.” HistoryLink.org Essays 5058 (Part 1) and 5059 (Part 2). The Free Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History, 2003. Web.
- This Is Your Life, Frances Farmer (1958), in re-release, This Is Your Life, Frances Farmer: The Classics (1990). Burbank: NBC-TV. Videocassette.
- Watts, Steven. Lecture by Professor Steven Watts, University of Missouri Department of History, in Catherine Parke's Life Writing Workshop, 2000. Lecture.
- Wilde, Oscar. “A Cheap Edition of a Great Man [Rosetti].” The Artist as Critic: Critical Writings of Oscar Wilde. By Wilde. Ed. Richard Ellmann. New York: Random, 1968. 49–68. Print.
- Woolf, Virginia. “The Lives of the Obscure: I, Taylors and Edgeworths.” Collected Essays of Virginia Woolf. 4 vols. Ed. Andrew McNeillie. London: Hogarth, 1986–94. 4: 119–27. Print.