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3.1—SPRING 1971

     Articles:

  • “Revenge and Wuthering Heights”—Thomas Vargish, p. 7
  • “A Dickensian Hero Retailored: The Carlylean Appreticeship of Martin Chuzzlewit”—Allan C. Christensen, p. 18
  • “The Yellow-Dog Incident in Conrad’s Lord Jim”—Kenneth Newell, p. 26
  • “Nicole Warren Diver and Scott Fitzgerald: The Girl and the Egotist”—Tom C. Coleman, III, p. 34
  • “Anthony Powell: Some Notes on the Art of the Sequence Novel”—Dan McLeod, p. 44
  • “The Moral Structure of Catch-22”—Thomas Blues, p. 64
  • An Interview in Austin with John Lehmann, p. 80
  • “The Literary Ancestry of Flaubert’s Hippolyte”—Melvin D. Palmer, p. 97
  • “Chateau Borel, Pétrus Borel, and Conrad’s Under Western Eyes”—David Leon Higdon, p. 99
Review Essays:

  • “In Praise of Sir Walter”—Edward Wagenknecht, p. 103
  • “Three Studies of Virginia Woolf”—David Leon Higdon, p. 108
Reviews:

  • Baetzhold, Mark Twain and John Bull: The British Connection and Geismar, Mark Twain: An American Prophet—Clyde Grimm, p. 118
  • Dillingham, Frank Norris: Instinct and Art—D. B. Graham, p. 122
  • Hall, The Lunatic Giant—Robert K. Morris, p. 123
  • Russell, Anthony Powell: A Quintet, Sextet, and War—Peter Wolfe, p. 126
  • Seelye, Melville: The Ironic Diagram—Lauriat Lane, Jr., p. 128

3.2—SUMMER 1971—American Negro Novelists Special Number

     Articles:

  • “Mau-Mauing the Literary Establishment”—John V. Hagopian, p. 135
  • “The Sons of Ham”—Albert Gérard, p. 148
  • “Richard Wright: The Man Who Lived Underground”—Michel Fabre, p. 165
  • “The Black Revolutionary Novel: 1899–1969”—Charles D. Peavy, p. 180
  • “The Aggregate Man in Jean Toomer’s Cane”—William C. Fischer, p. 190
  • “A Note on Ishmael Reed: Revolutionary Novelist”—Nick Aaron Ford, p. 216
  • “A Checklist of Books and Essays About American Negro Novelists”—Robert E. McDowell and George Fortenberry, p. 219

3.3—FALL 1971

     Articles:

  • “Theme and Structure in Pamela”—Donald E. Morton, p. 242
  • “Peregrine Pickle: The Complete Satirist”—David L. Evans, p. 258
  • “The ‘Foreign Philanthropy Question’ in Bleak House: A Carlylean Influence”—Rodger L. Tarr, p. 275
  • “History and Archetype in The Mayor of Casterbridge”—Seymour Migdal, p. 284
  • “The Sanctioned Rebel”—Judith Fetterley, p. 293
  • “The Conclusion of Sons and Lovers: A Reconsideration”—Donald E. Mortland, p. 305
  • An Interview in Florida with Erskine Caldwell—p. 316
Review Essay:

  • “‘Spiritual Activism’ and ‘Radical Sophistication’ in the Contemporary American Novel”—M. Gilbert Porter, p. 332
Reviews:

  • Biles, Talk: Conversations with William Golding—Bernard Oldsey, p. 346
  • Reck, Literature and Responsibility—Verena Conley, p. 348
  • Stern, The Golden Moment: The Novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald—Harry T. Moore, p. 350

3.4—WINTER 1971—Twetieth Century British Novel Special Number

     Articles:

  • “Well Beyond Laughter: Directions from Fifties’ Comic Fiction”—James Gindin, p. 357
  • “The Jamesian Legacy in The Good Soldier”—John Tytell, p. 365
  • Cards of Identity and the Satiric Mode”—James Olney, p. 374
  • “The Lion and the Unicorn: Angus Wilson’s Triumphant Tragedy”—Jean Sudrann, p. 390
  • “Contributions to Night and Day by Elizabeth Bowen, Graham Greene, and Anthony Powell”—Robert Murray Davis, p. 401
  • An Interview in New York with Walter Allan—p. 405