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28.1—SPRING 1996

     Articles:

  • “Writing Men Reading in Charlotte Lennox’s The Female Quixote”—Ellen Gardiner, p. 1
  • “Looking at the Other: Cultural Difference and the Traveller’s Gaze in The Italian”—Diego Saglia, p. 12
  • “‘Song of the Dying Swan’?: The Nineteenth-Century Response to Persuasion”—Joanne Wilkes, p. 38
  • “Inside and Outside: Jane Eyre and Marginalization Through Labeling”—John G. Peters, p. 57
  • ‘Mon Pauvre Prisonnier’: Becky Sharp and the Triumph of Napoleon”—Patricia Marks, p. 76
  • The Ghost and Mrs. Muir: Laughing With the Captain in the House”—Margaret D. Stetz, p. 93
     Reviews:

  • Alkon, Paul K. Science Fiction Before 1900: Imagination Discovers Technology—John Huntington, p. 114
  • Bryant, John. Melville and Repose: The Rhetoric of Humor in the American Renaissance—Dennis Berthold, p. 115
  • Bueler, Lois E. “Clarissa”’s Plots—Murray L. Brown, p. 118
  • Darnell, Donald. James Fenimore Cooper, Novelist of Manners—John Engell, p. 120
  • Foley, Barbara. Radical Representations: Politics and Form in U. S. Proletarian Fiction, 1929–1941—Stephen Enniss, p. 122
  • Luftig, Victor. Seeing Together: Friendship Between the Sexes in English Writing, From Mill to Woolf—Kelly Hager, p. 123
  • Murav, Harriet. Holy Foolishness: Dostoevsky’s Novels and the Politics of Cultural Critique—David M. Bethea, p. 125
  • Stevenson, Robert Louis. Tales from the Prince of Storytellers—Katherine Linehan, p. 129
  • Sullivan, Zohreh T. Narratives of Empire: The Fictions of Rudyard Kipling—John A. McClure, p. 130
  • Turner, Martha A. Mechanism and the Novel: Science in the Narrative Process—Daniel Schenker, p. 132
  • Watson, Ritchie Devon, Jr. Yeoman Versus Cavalier: The Old Southwest’s Road to Rebellion—Philip Dubuisson Castille, p. 135
  • Watts, Steven. The Romance of Real Life: Charles Brockden Brown and the Origins of American Culture—Elizabeth Jane Wall Hinds, p. 138

28.2—SUMMER 1996

     Articles:

  • “Men of Sense and Silly Wives: The Confusions of Mr. Knightley”—Mary Waldron, p. 141
  • “The Psychology of Loneliness in Wuthering Heights”—Eric P. Levy, p. 158
  • “Maggie Tulliver’s Sad Sacrifice: Confusing But Not Confused”—June Skye Szirotny, p. 178
  • “Sophia Lee and the Gothic of Female Community”—Megan Lynn Isaac, p. 200
  • “‘God save us from bourgeois adventure’: The Figure of the Terrorist in Contemporary American Conspiracy Fiction”—Steffen Hantke, p. 219
     Essay-Review:

  • “The Function of Literature in the Age of the Masses”—Michael Tratner, p. 244
     Reviews:

  • Baldridge, Cates. The Dialogues of Dissent in the English Novel—Daryl S. Ogden, p. 256
  • Comley, Nancy R. and Robert Scholes. Hemingway’s Genders: Rereading the Hemingway Text—D. Quentin Miller, p. 258
  • Keane, Patrick J. Coleridge’s Submerged Politics: “The Ancient Mariner” and “Robinson Crusoe”—Irving N. Rothman, p. 260
  • Lewiecki-Wilson, Cynthia. Writing Against the Family: Gender in Lawrence and Joyce—Earl G. Ingersoll, p. 263
  • McCormick, Kathleen and Erwin R. Steinberg, eds. Approaches to Teaching Joyce’s “Ulysses”—Daniel R. Schwarz, p. 266
  • Spoo, Robert. James Joyce and the Language of History: Dedalus’s Nightmare—Susan C. Harris, p. 271
  • Stahl, J. D. Mark Twain, Culture and Gender: Envisioning America Through Europe—David Laverenz, p. 274

28.3—FALL 1996—Special Number: Queerer Than Fiction

     Articles:

  • “Introduction: Queerer than Fiction”—Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, p. 277
  • “Pursuing Perfection: Dombey and Son, Female Homoerotic Desire, and the Sentimental Heroine”—Mary Armstrong, p. 281
  • “Forged in Crisis: Queer Beginnings of Modern Masculinity in a Canonical French Novel”—James Creech, p. 303
  • “Strange Brothers”—Jonathan Goldberg, p. 322
  • “Strange Gourmet: Taste, Waste, Proust”—Joseph Litvak, p. 338
  • “The Importance of Being Bored: The Dividends of Ennui in The Picture of Dorian Gray”—Jeff Nunokawa, p. 357
  • “Tearing the Goat’s Flesh: Homosexuality, Abjection and the Production of a Late-Twentieth-Century Black Masculinity—Robert Reid-Pharr, p. 372
  • “The Female World of Exorcism and Displacement (or, Relations Between Women in Henry James’s Nineteenth-Century The Portrait of a Lady)—Melissa Solomon, p. 395
  • “‘Sinister Fruitiness’: Neuromancer, Internet Sexuality and the Turing Test”—Tyler Stevens, p. 414
  • “Prophylactics and Brains: Beloved in the Cybernetic Age of Aids”—Kathryn Bond Stockton, p. 434

28.4—WINTER 1996

     Articles:

  • “Non-Canonical Women’s Novels of the Romantic Era: Romantic Ideologies and the Problematics of Gender and Genre”—Julie Shaffer, p. 469
  • “The Mystery at Thornfield: Representations of Madness in Jane Eyre”—Valerie Beattie, p. 493
  • “Resisting Gwendolen’s ‘Subjection’: Daniel Deronda’s Proto-Feminism”—Eileen Sypher, p. 506
  • “The Mythic Svengali: Anti-Aestheticism in Trilby”—Jonathan H. Grossman, p. 525
  • “Interiors and the Interior Life in Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth”—John Clubbe, p. 543
  • “Resurfacings of The Deeps: Semiotic Balance in Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping”—Kristin King, p. 565
     Essay-Review:

  • “Doing Djuna Justice: The Challenges of the Barnes Biography”—Margot Norris, p. 581
     Reviews:

  • Atwill, William D. Fire and Power: The American Space Program as Postmodern Narrative—D. Quentin Miller, p. 592
  • Kessler, Carol Farley. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Her Progress Toward Utopia with Selected Writings—Gary Scharnhorst, p. 594
  • Kopelson, Kevin. Love’s Litany: The Writing of Modern Homoerotics—John Maynard, p. 597
  • Langland, Elizabeth. Nobody’s Angels: Middle-Class Women and Domestic Ideology in Victorian Culture—John R. Reed, p. 599
  • McClure, John. Late Imperial Romance—Andrea White, p. 601
  • Menton, Seymour. Latin American’s New Historical Novel—Jane Robinett, p. 604
  • Parker, David. Ethics, Theory, and the Novel—Christian Moraru, p. 607
  • Rabinovitz, Rubin. Innovation in Samuel Beckett’s Fiction—Sylvie Debevec Henning, p. 611
  • Rossen, Janice. The University in Modern Fiction: When Power is Academic—Frank G. Novak, Jr., p. 612