GAUTHIER P., Richard Hurrell Froude’s influence on Newman and the Oxford Movement,
VAISS P. (Ed.), From Oxford to the People. Reconsidering Newman and the Oxford Movement, Gracewing 1996, pp. 255-268;
GARRARD J., Archbishop Howley and the Oxford Movement,
VAISS P. (Ed.), From Oxford to the People. Reconsidering Newman and the Oxford Movement, Gracewing 1996, pp. 269-285;
ASVELD P., Newman and Wiseman in the days of the Oxford Movement,
VAISS P. (Ed.), From Oxford to the People. Reconsidering Newman and the Oxford Movement, Gracewing 1996, pp. 286-298.
TALLMON J.M., Newman’s Contribution to Conceptualizing Rhetorical Reason.
Rhetoric Society Quarterly, 25 (1995) 1-4, 197-213.
BOUDENS R., Irony and Humor in Newman:
Louvain Studies 20/2-3 (1995) 254-264.
BOYCE P., Newman: Light amid the encircling gloom:
Mount Carmel (Darlington, England) 43/3 (1995) 33-39.
BOYCE P., Newman’s Reception into the Catholic Church:
its Message and Relevance: Teresianum (Roma) 46 (1995) 521-542.
BRITT J.F., Newman’s Use of Sacred Scripture in Texts on the Incarnation and Mary.
Part of the Doctoral Dissertation in Sacred Theology with Specialization in Marian Studies: Marian Library Studies (Dayton, USA) New Series 24 (1992-95) 199-264.
COSGROVE B., “We cannot do without a View”: John Henry Newman, William James and the case against scepticism,
The Irish Theological Quarterly (Maynooth) 61/1 (1995) 32-43.
EVANS G.R., Theology’s Historical Task: The Problem of Disciplines,
New Blackfriars 76 (1995), 19 – 30.