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17.1—SPRING 1985

     Articles:

  • Emma and the Democracy of Desire”—Beatrice Marie, p. 1
  • “Parent-Child Tensions in Frankenstein: The Search for Communion”—Laura P. Claridge, p. 14
  • Resurrection and Little Dorrit: Tolstoy and Dickens Reconsidered”—Brian Rosenberg, p. 27
  • “The Spectrum of ‘Taste’ in Barchester Towers”—Gay Sibley, p. 38
  • “The Rhetoric of Silence in Hardy’s Fiction”—Wayne C. Anderson, p. 53
  • “Wells’s Tono-Bungay: The Novel Within the Novel”—Jeffery Sommers, p. 69
     Review Essays:

  • “Faulkner’s Blues”—David Krause, p. 80
  • “Virginia Woolf and Her Critics: ‘On the Discrimination of Feminisms’”—Lydia Blanchard, p. 95
     Reviews:

  • Graver, George Eliot and Community: A Study in Social Theory and Fictional Form—Rosemary T. VanArsdel, p. 105
  • Mortimer, Faulkner’s Rhetoric of Loss: A Study in Perception and Meaning—Noel Polk, p. 106
  • Nelson, Zola and the Bourgeoisie: A Study of Themes and Techniques in Les Rougon-Macquart and Blackall, The Novels of the German Romantics —Richard D. Fulton, p. 108
  • Saldívar, Figural Language in the Novel: The Flowers of Speech from Cervantes to Joyce—Patrick O’Donnell, p. 110
  • Schneider, D. H. Lawrence: The Artist as Psychologist—William K. Buckley, p.112

17.2—SUMMER 1985

     Articles:

  • “From Pamela to Jane Gray; or, How Not to Become the Heroine of Your Own Text”—Temma F. Berg, p. 115
  • “Bondage and Freedom in Thackeray’s Pendennis”—Deborah A. Thomas, p. 138
  • “Plato’s Symposium and the Tragicomic Novel”—Randall Craig, p. 158
  • “History as Myth: Charles Kingsley’s Hereward the Wake”—Michael A. Young, p. 174
  • “Miss Price All Alone: Metaphors of Distance in Mansfield Park”—Kenneth L. Moler, p. 189
  • “Mr. Kurtz, I Presume? Livingstone and Stanley as Prototypes of Kurtz and Marlow”—Mary Golanka, p. 194
  • “A Trip to Greeneland: The Plagiarizing Narrator of Kingsley Amis’s I Like It Here”—Norman Macleod, p. 203
     Review Essay:

  • “The Once and Future Austen”—Barry Roth, p. 218

17.3—FALL 1985

     Articles:

  • “The Character of Esther and the Narrative Structure of Bleak House”—John P. Frazee, p. 227
  • “The Holy Guide-Book and The Sword of the Lord: How Melville Used the Bible in Redburn and White Jacket”—Kris Lackey, p. 241
  • “Falkland’s Story: Caleb Williams’ Other Voice”—Andrew Scheiber, p. 255
  • “Ursula Brangwen and ‘The Essential Criticism’: The Female Corrective in Women in Love”—Peter Balbert, p. 267
  • “Modernist Writers and Publishers”—Joyce Wexler, p. 286
  • “Proteus: From Thought to Things”—Patricia A. Rimo, p. 296
     Review Essay:

  • “The Novel in the Rough: Two New Studies of English Fiction Before Defoe”—Jerry C. Beasley, p. 303
     Reviews:

  • Adams, Joyce Cary’s Trilogies: Pursuit of the Particular Real and Roby, Joyce Cary—Edwin Christian, p. 311
  • Bold, Sir Walter Scott: The Long-Forgotten Melody—Judith Wilt, p. 312
  • Brivic, Joyce the Creator—Michael Patrick Gillespie, p. 314
  • Hardy, Jane Austen’s Heroines: Intimacy in Human Relationships—David R. Anderson, p. 315
  • Humphries, Metamorphoses of the Raven: Literary Overdeterminedness in France and the South Since Poe—Bettina Knapp, p. 317
  • Kreiswirth, William Faulkner: The Making of a Novelist—Noel Polk, p. 319
  • Mann, The Language That Makes George Eliot’s Fiction—Joseph Wiesenfarth, p. 321
  • O’Hanlon, Joseph Conrad and Charles Darwin: The Influence of Scientific Thought on Conrad’s Fiction and Parry, Conrad and Imperialism: Ideological Boundaries and Visionary Frontiers—David Leon Higdon, p. 322
  • Owens, John Steinbeck’s Re-Vision of America—Robert Con Davis, p. 326
  • Sharrock, Saints, Sinners and Comedians: The Novel of Graham Greene—Richard Kelly, p. 329
  • Walsh, American War Literature: 1914 to Vietnam—William K. Buckley, p. 331

17.4—WINTER 1985

     Articles:

  • “Early English Fiction: Historical Criticism, Old and New”—Jerry C. Beasley, p. 335
  • “Facing the Fire at Home: Redburn’s ‘Inland Imagination’”—Brian Saunders, p. 355
  • Daniel Deronda: A View of Grandcourt”—Badri Raina, p. 371
  • “The Tough-and Tender-Minded: W. D. Howells’s The Landlord at Lion’s Head”—C. A. Erickson, p. 383
  • The Guilded Age: Performance, Power, and Authority”—John E. Bassett, p. 395
  • “Poisonous Creature: Holmes’s Elsie Venner”—Margaret Hallissy, p. 406
     Reviews:

  • Adams, Travel Literature and the Evolution of the Novel—Howard Anderson, p. 420
  • Birdsall, Defoe’s Perpetual Seekers: A Study of The Major Fiction—David S. Durant, p. 421
  • Braham, A Sort of Columbus: The American Voyages of Saul Bellow’s Fiction—A. Sidney Knowles, p. 422
  • Frank, Charles Dickens and the Romantic Self—Richard A. Levine, p. 423
  • Hardy, The Moral Art of Dickens—Daniel Cottom, p. 424
  • Kaston, Imagination and Desire in the Novels of Henry James—Judith E. Funston, p. 425
  • Kestner, Protest and Reform: The British Social Narrative By Women 1827-1867—Karla K. Walters, p. 428
  • Myer, Laurence Sterne: Riddles and Mysteries—Lila Graves, p. 430
  • Rogin, Subversive Genealogy: The Politics and Art of Herman Melville—Mark R. Patterson, p. 432
  • Rooney, Dreams and Visions: A Study of American Utopias, 1865-1917—Christopher P. Wilson, p. 434
  • Rowe, The Theoretical Dimensions of Henry James and Fowler, Henry James’s American Girl: The Embroidery On The Canvas—Geoffrey D. Smith, p. 435
  • Secor and Secor, The Return of the Good Soldier: Ford Madox Ford and Violet Hunt’s 1917 Diary and Snitow, Ford Madox Ford and The Voice of Uncertainty—Joseph Wiesenfarth, p. 437
  • Smith, The Novel and Society: Defoe to George Eliot—Gary Lee Stonum, p. 441
  • Squires and Jackson, D. H. Lawrence’s ‘Lady’: A New Look At Lady Chatterley’s Lover—Michael Patrick Gillespie, p. 443