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31.1—SPRING 1999

     Articles:

  • “Inordinate Desire: Schooling the Senses in Elizabeth Inchbald’s A Simple Story”—Candace Ward, p. 1
  • “Frankenstein and the Reprobate’s Conscience”—Jane Goodall, p. 19
  • “Terrible Dreams of Creative Power: The Question of No. 44”—Derek Parker Royal, p. 44
  • “Realism and Modernists’ Bad Reputation”—Joyce Wexler, p. 60
  • “Queering Class: Leslie Feinberg’s Stone Butch Blues”—Cat Moses, p. 74
     Essay-Review:

  • “The Lesson of the Master: The New York Times Edition, James Studies, and Contemporary Textual Scholarship”—Philip Cohen, p. 98
     Reviews:

  • Daly, Brenda. Lavish Self-Divisions: The Novels of Joyce Carol Oates and Johnson, Greg. Invisible Writer: A Biography of Joyce Carol Oates—Ellen G. Friedman, p. 118
  • O’Farrell, Mary Ann. Telling Complexions: The Nineteenth-Century English Novel and the Blush—Gil Haroian-Guerin, p. 120
  • Palmer, William J. Dickens and New Historicism—Richard J. Dunn, p. 122
  • Samuels, Shirley. Romances of the Republic: Women, the Family, and Violence in the Literature of the Early American Nation—Dean Papas, p. 124
  • Schmitt, Cannon. Alien Nation: Nineteenth-Century Gothic Fictions and English Nationality—Stephen Arata, p. 126
  • Stephens, Robert O. The Family Saga in the South: Generations and Destinies—Phillip Dubuisson Castille, p. 128
  • Thomas, Brook. American Literary Realism and the Failed Promise of Contract—Gregg D. Crane, p. 130

31.2—SUMMER 1999

     Articles:

  • “Subverting Tragic Conventions: Aphra Behn’s Turn to the Novel”—Rachel K. Carnell, p. 133
  • “‘Be wary, Sir, when you imitate him’: The Perils of Didacticism in Tristram Shandy”—David Mazella, p. 152
  • “‘Within the Domain of Chaos’: Nathaniel Hawthorne, Lucretian Physics, and Martial Logic”—Martin Kevorkian, p. 178
  • “The Delinquent’s Sabbath; or, The Return of the Repressed: The Matter of Bodies in Native Son”—Katherine Fishburn, p. 202
  • “Glossing Scripts and Scripting Pleasure in Mishima’s Confessions of a Mask”—Marjorie Rhine, p. 222
     Essay-Review:

  • “Oedipuscripts”—Eyal Amiran, p. 234
     Reviews:

  • Alley, Henry. The Quest for Anonymity: The Novels of George Eliot—Patricia Payette, p. 242
  • Beasley, Jerry C. Tobias Smollett: Novelist—Aileen Douglas, p. 245
  • Chitham, Edward. The Birth of Wuthering Heights: Emily Brontė at Work—Richard J. Dunn, p. 247
  • Lassner, Phyllis. British Women Writers of World War II: Battlegrounds of Their Own and Schneider, Karen. Loving Arms: British Women Writing the Second World War—Kristin Bluemel, p. 249
  • Pizer, Donald. American Expatriate Writing and the Paris Moment: Modernism and Place—Linda Wagner-Martin, p. 252
  • Stern, Julia. The Plight of Feeling: Sympathy and Dissent in the Early American Novel—Bryce Traister, p. 253
  • Tate, Claudia. Psychoanalysis and Black Novels: Desire and the Protocols of Race—Michael E. Nowlin, p. 255

31.3—FALL 1999

     Articles:

  • “Signing Evelina: Female Self-Inscription in the Discourse of Letters”—Samuel Choi, p. 259
  • “Middle-Class Erasures: The Decreations of Mrs. General and Mr. Podsnap”—Rodney Stenning Edgecombe, p. 279
  • “Character Design in The Picture of Dorian Gray”—Sheldon W. Liebman, p. 296
  • “‘The Hun is at the gate!’: Historicizing Kipling’s Militaristic Rhetoric, From the Imperial Periphery to the National Center; Part One: The Russian Threat to British India”—A. Michael Matin, p. 317
  • “‘Glorious Pagan That I Adore’: Resisting the National Reproductive Imperative in Rosamond Lehmann’s Dusty Answer”—Andrea Lewis, p. 357
     Reviews:

  • Corkin, Stanley. Realism and the Birth of the Modern United States—Mary Lawlor, p. 374
  • Lehan, Richard. The City in Literature: An Intellectual and Cultural History—Donald Pizer, p. 377
  • Lynch, Deidre and William B. Warner, eds. Cultural Institutions of the Novel—Eric Daffron, p. 378
  • Orlov, Paul A. An American Tragedy: Perils of the Self-Seeking Success—Stephen Brennan, p. 380
  • Westervelt, Linda A. Beyond Innocence, or the Altersroman in Modern Fiction—Kathleen Woodward, p. 383

31.4—WINTER 1999

     Articles:

  • “Reading the Wound: Wollstonecraft’s Wrongs of Woman, or Maria and Trauma Theory”—Diane Long Hoeveler, p. 387
  • “Ann Radcliffe’s Gothic Narrative and the Readers at Home”—Scott MacKenzie, p. 409
  • “‘The Hun is at the gate!’: Historicizing Kipling’s Militaristic Rhetoric, From the Imperial Periphery to the National Center; Part Two: The French, Russian, and German Threats to Great Britain”—A. Michael Matin, p. 432
  • “Not Bombshells But Basketcases: Gendered Illness in Nuclear Texts”—Jacqueline Foertsch, p. 471
  • “Men Giving Birth to New World Orders: Martin Amis’s Time’s Arrow”—Greg Harris, p. 489
     Essay-Review:

  • “Kant Touch This: Joseph Tabbi’s Postmodern Sublime”—John Mascaro, p. 506
     Reviews:

  • Bowker, Gordon. Through the Dark Labyrinth: A Biography of Lawrence Durrell and MacNiven, Ian S. Lawrence Durrell: A Biography—Earl G. Ingersoll, p. 518
  • Otter, Samuel. Melville’s Anatomies—Geoffrey Sanborn, p. 521
  • Stout, Janis P. Through the Window, Out the Door: Women’s Narratives of Departure, From Austen to Cather, to Tyler, Morrison, and Didion—Amy L. Wink, p. 524
  • Tremper, Ellen. “Who Lived at Alfoxton?”: Virginia Woolf and Romanticism—James Najarian, p. 527