Part I A Voyage to Lilliput --
Chapter 1 Gulliver Is Shipwrecked and Made a Prisoner 1 --
Chapter 2 Emperor of Lilliput 18 --
Chapter 3 Gulliver at the Court of Lilliput 34 --
Chapter 4 Emperor's Palace and His Principal Secretary 45 --
Chapter 5 Gulliver Prevents an Invasion of Lilliput 53 --
Chapter 6 Lilliput's Laws, Customs, and Educational Methods 61 --
Chapter 7 Escape to Blefuscu 74 --
Chapter 8 Gulliver Returns to His Native Country 84 --
Part II A Voyage to Brobdingnag --
Chapter 9 Gulliver Is Captured by a Native 97 --
Chapter 10 Gulliver Is Taken to the City 113 --
Chapter 11 Queen Buys Gulliver from the Farmer 123 --
Chapter 12 Gulliver Shows His Skill in Navigation 139 --
Chapter 13 Gulliver Amuses the King and Queen 158 --
Chapter 14 Gulliver Returns to England 172 --
Part III Voyages to Laputa and the Country of the Houyhnhnms --
Chapter 15 A Flying Island 193 --
Chapter 16 Laputa and Its People 203 --
Chapter 17 Grand Academy at Lagado 220 --
Chapter 18 Land of Magic-Japan-Then Home 238 --
Chapter 19 Houyhnhnms' Country 255 --
Chapter 20 Gulliver Understands the Speech of the Master Horse 276 --
Chapter 21 Gulliver Discusses England and Makes Observations on the Houyhnhnms 293 --
Chapter 22 Gulliver Is Forced to Return Home 311.
Part I Gulliver's Travels: The Complete Text --
Introduction: Biographical and Historical Contexts --
Complete Text [1965 Herbert Davis Edition, based on the Faulkner Edition of 1735] --
Part II Gulliver's Travels: A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism --
A Critical History of Gulliver's Travels --
Feminist Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Feminist Criticism? --
Feminist Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Feminist Perspective: --
Felicity A. Nussbaum, Gulliver's Malice: Gender and the Satiric Stance --
New Historicism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is New Historicism? --
New Historicism: A Selected Bibliography --
A New Historicist Perspective: --
Carole Fabricant, History, Narrativity, and Swift's Project to "Mend the World" --
Deconstruction and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Deconstruction? --
Deconstruction: A Selected Bibliography --
A Deconstuctionist Perspective: --
Terry Castle, Why the Houyhnhnms Don't Write: Swift, Satire, and the Fear of the Text --
Reader-Response Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Reader-Response Criticism? --
Reader-Response Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Reader-Response Perspective: --
Michael J. Conlon, Performance as Response in Swift's Gulliver's Travels --
Psychoanalytic Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Psychoanalytic Criticism? --
Psychoanalytic Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Psychoanalytic Perspective: --
Carol Barash, Violence and the Maternal: Swift, Psychoanalysis, and the 1720s.
Gulliver's Travels: The Complete Text
Introduction: Biographical and Historical Contexts
The Complete Text [1965 Herbert Davis Edition, based on the Faulkner Edition of 1735]
Gulliver's Travels: A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism
A Critical History of Gulliver's Travels
Feminist Criticism and Gulliver's Travels
What Is Feminist Criticism?
Feminist Criticism: A Selected Bibliography
Felicity A. Nussbaum, Gulliver's Malice: Gender and the Satiric Stance
New Historicism and Gulliver's Travels
New Historicism: A Selected Bibliography
A New Historicist Perspective:
Carole Fabricant, History, Narrativity, and Swift's Project to "Mend the World"
Deconstruction and Gulliver's Travels
Deconstruction: A Selected Bibliography
A Deconstuctionist Perspective:
Terry Castle, Why the Houyhnhnms Don't Write: Swift, Satire, and the Fear of the Text
Reader-Response Criticism and Gulliver's Travels
What Is Reader-Response Criticism?
Reader-Response Criticism: A Selected Bibliography
A Reader-Response Perspective:
Michael J. Conlon, Performance as Response in Swift's Gulliver's Travels
Psychoanalytic Criticism and Gulliver's Travels
What Is Psychoanalytic Criticism?
Psychoanalytic Criticism: A Selected Bibliography
A Psychoanalytic Perspective:
Carol Barash, Violence and the Maternal: Swift, Psychoanalysis, and the 1720s.
Part I Gulliver's Travels: The Complete Text --
Introduction: Biographical and Historical Contexts --
Complete Text [1965 Herbert Davis Edition, based on the Faulkner Edition of 1735] --
Part II Gulliver's Travels: A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism --
A Critical History of Gulliver's Travels --
Feminist Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Feminist Criticism? --
Feminist Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Feminist Perspective: --
Felicity A. Nussbaum, Gulliver's Malice: Gender and the Satiric Stance --
New Historicism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is New Historicism? --
New Historicism: A Selected Bibliography --
A New Historicist Perspective: --
Carole Fabricant, History, Narrativity, and Swift's Project to "Mend the World" --
Deconstruction and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Deconstruction? --
Deconstruction: A Selected Bibliography --
A Deconstuctionist Perspective: --
Terry Castle, Why the Houyhnhnms Don't Write: Swift, Satire, and the Fear of the Text --
Reader-Response Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Reader-Response Criticism? --
Reader-Response Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Reader-Response Perspective: --
Michael J. Conlon, Performance as Response in Swift's Gulliver's Travels --
Psychoanalytic Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Psychoanalytic Criticism? --
Psychoanalytic Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Psychoanalytic Perspective: --
Carol Barash, Violence and the Maternal: Swift, Psychoanalysis, and the 1720s.
A voyage to Brobdingnag --
A voyage to Laputa, Balnibarbi, Luggnagg, Glubbdubdrib and Japan --
A voyage to the Houyhnhnms.
From the Book - New edition.
A chronology of Jonathan Swift
A letter from Capt. Gulliver to his cousin Sympson
The publisher to the reader
A voyage to Laputa, Balnibarbi, Luggnagg, Glubbdubdrib, and Japan
A voyage to the country of the Houyhnhnms.
pt. 1. A voyage to Lilliput.
pt. 2. A voyage to Brobdingnag.
pt. 1. A voyage to Lilliput
pt. 2. A voyage to Brobdingnag.
CD1. Part one. A letter from Capt Gulliver to his cousin Sympson (4:39)
A voyage to Lilliput (6:23)
I lay all this while in great uneasiness (9:17)
The emperor of Lilliput (13:29)
The empire of Blefuscu (10:52)
A private intrigue (5:44)
A voyage to Brobdingnag (7:43)
I am carried home (5:32) CD2. Part two. I am given a new name-Gildrig (10:41)
Kites and maids of honour (13:00)
In hopes to ingratiate my self farther into his Majesty's favour (6:31)
I had now been two years in this country (10:46)
Part three. A voyage to Laputa, Balnibarbi and Luggnagg (9:22)
The palace, and the Chamber of Presence (8:13)
I take leave of his Majesty ... and arrive in Balnibarbi (9:47)
In the school of political projectors (0:51)
The island of Luggnagg (9:17)
CD3. An account of the Struldbruggs (5:52)
Part four. A voyage to the country of the Houyhnhnms (10:15)
The two horses came up to me (11:08)
The language-like High Dutch or German (5:58)
My master heard me with great appearances of uneasiness (15:13)
A confederacy of injustice (3:07)
The congruity betwixt me and the Yahoos (13:49)
I began this desperate voyage (7:12)
Thus, gentle reader (6:26).
From the Book - Large Print - Large print edition.
Part I Gulliver's Travels: The Complete Text --
Introduction: Biographical and Historical Contexts --
Complete Text [1965 Herbert Davis Edition, based on the Faulkner Edition of 1735] --
Part II Gulliver's Travels: A Case Study in Contemporary Criticism --
A Critical History of Gulliver's Travels --
Feminist Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Feminist Criticism? --
Feminist Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Feminist Perspective: --
Felicity A. Nussbaum, Gulliver's Malice: Gender and the Satiric Stance --
New Historicism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is New Historicism? --
New Historicism: A Selected Bibliography --
A New Historicist Perspective: --
Carole Fabricant, History, Narrativity, and Swift's Project to "Mend the World" --
Deconstruction and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Deconstruction? --
Deconstruction: A Selected Bibliography --
A Deconstuctionist Perspective: --
Terry Castle, Why the Houyhnhnms Don't Write: Swift, Satire, and the Fear of the Text --
Reader-Response Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Reader-Response Criticism? --
Reader-Response Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Reader-Response Perspective: --
Michael J. Conlon, Performance as Response in Swift's Gulliver's Travels --
Psychoanalytic Criticism and Gulliver's Travels --
What Is Psychoanalytic Criticism? --
Psychoanalytic Criticism: A Selected Bibliography --
A Psychoanalytic Perspective: --
Carol Barash, Violence and the Maternal: Swift, Psychoanalysis, and the 1720s.