ARCHIVES

Volume:
43 | 42 | 41 | 40 | 39 | 38 | 37 | 36 | 35 | 34 | 33 | 32 | 31 | 30 | 29 | 28 | 27 | 26 | 25 | 24 | 23 | 22 | 21 | 20 | 19 | 18 | 17 | 16 | 15 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1

37.1—SPRING 2005

     Articles:

  • “Charles Brockden Brown’s Ormond, Property Exchange, and the Literary Marketplace In the Early American Republic”—Scott Ellis, p. 1
  • “Cosmic and Psychological Redemption in George Macdonald’s Lilith”—Bonnie Gaarden, p. 20
  • “‘Felt, Not Seen Not Heard’: Quentin Compson, Modernist Suicide and Southern History”—Nathaniel A. Miller, p. 37
  • “Making Do: George Orwell’s Coming up for Air”—Annette Federico, p. 50
  • “Echo Chamber: Undertaking The Body Artist”—Mark Osteen, p. 64
     Essay-Review

  • “The Kraken in the Computer”—Frank G. Novak, Jr., p. 82
     Reviews

  • Abbas, Niran, ed. Thomas Pynchon: Reading from the Margins—Kathryn Hume, p. 99
  • Kress, Jill M. The Figure of Consciousness: William James, Henry James, and Edith Wharton—Renee Tursi, p. 101
  • Latham, Sean. Am I a Snob?—Catharine Turner, p. 104
  • Leader, Zachary, ed. On Modern British Fiction—Jeffrey Meyers, p. 107
  • Mattessich, Stefan. Lines of Flight: Discursive Time and Countercultural Desire in the Work of Thomas Pynchon—Daniel Punday, p. 109
  • Milsei, Laurent, ed. James Joyce and the Difference of Language—John McCourt, p. 111
  • Paris, Bernard J. Rereading George Eliot: Changing Responses to Her Experiments in Life—William Baker, p. 115
  • Schneider, Lissa. Conrad’s Narratives of Difference: Not Exactly for Boys—Tom Henthorne, p. 118
  • Trombley, Laura E. Skandera and Michael J. Kiskis. Constructing Mark Twain: New Directions in Scholarship—Jason Horn, p. 120

37.2—SUMMER 2005

     Articles:

  • “Cosmopolitan Complexities in Maria Edgeworth’s Ennui”—Katy Brundan, p. 123
  • “Conjecturing Possibilities: Reading and Misreading Texts in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice”—Felicia Bonaparte, p. 141
  • “Collins’s Moonstone: the Victorian Novel as Sacrifice, Theft, Gift and Debt”—Iliana Blumberg, p. 162
  • “‘There’s More Honor’: Reinterpreting Tom and the Evasion in Huckleberry Finn”—Kevin Michael Scott, p. 187
  • “Language, Violence, and Irrevocability: Speech Acts in Tess of the D’urbevilles”—Satoshi Nishimura, p. 208
     Essay-Reviews:

  • “The Victorian Novel in The Material World”—James Najarian, p. 223
     Reviews:

  • Abbott, Megan E. The Street Was Mine: White Masculinity in Hardboiled Fiction and Film Noir—Erin A. Smith, p. 235
  • Ardis, Ann L. and Leslie W. Lewis, eds. Women’s Experience of Modernity 1875-1945—Susan McCabe, p. 237
  • Davies, Laurence, Frederick R. Karl and Owen Knowles, eds. The Collected Letters of Joseph Conrad: Volume 6: 1917-1919—Andrea White, p. 240
  • Esteve, Mary. The Aesthetics and Politics of the Crowd in American Literature—Trent Hickman, p. 242
  • Gaitet, Pascale. Queens and Revolutionaries: New Readings of Jean Genet—Mark Spitzer, p. 244
  • Glen, Heather. Charlotte Brontë: The Imagination in History—Richard Dunnt, p. 246
  • Stanton, Judith Phillips. The Collected Letters of Charlotte Smith—Brent Raycroft, p. 248

37.3—FALL 2005

     Articles:

  • “From Roman to Roman: The Jacobin Novel and the Roman Legacy in the 1790s”—Jonathan Sachs, p. 253
  • “Seeing Colonial America and Writing Home about It: Charlotte Lennox's Euphemia, Epistolarity, and The Feminine Picturesque”—Susan Kubica Howard, p. 273
  • “‘One function in particular’: Professionalism and Specialization in Daniel Deronda”—Susan Colón, p. 292
  • “Christopher Newman's Haircloth Shirt: Wordly Asceticism, Conversion, and Auto-machia in The American”—Pericles Lewis, p. 308
  • “George Gissing's Psychology of ‘Female Imbecility’”—Gerald Schmidt, p. 329
     Review-Essay:

  • “Jane Austen Conversation”—Robert G. Dryden, p. 343
     Reviews:

  • Curtis, Vanessa. Virginia Woolf's Women—Holly Henry, p. 349
  • Dooley, Gillian, Ed. From a Tiny Corner in the House of Fiction: Conversations with Iris Murdoch—Margaret Moan Rowe, p. 351
  • Granofsky, Ronald. D. H. Lawrence and Survival: Darwinism in the Fiction of the Transitional Period—Bruce Clarke, p. 352
  • Haralson, Eric. Henry James and Queer Modernity—Wendy Graham, p. 355
  • Krauth, Leland. Mark Twain & Company: Six Literary Relations—Peter Stoneley, p. 357
  • Marks, Syliva Kasey. Writing for the Rising Generation: British Fiction for Young People, 1672–1839—Naomi Wood, p. 359
  • Meyers, Jeffrey. Somerset Maugham: A Life—Robert L. Calder, p. 360
  • Michelucci, Stefania. Space and Place in the Works of D. H. Lawrence—Louis K. Greiff, p. 363
  • Quint, David. Cervantes's Novel of Modern Times. A New Reading ofDon Quixote—Frederick A. DeArmas, p. 365
  • Strychacz, Thomas. Hemingway's Theaters of Masculinity—Robert W. Trogdon, p. 367

37.4—WINTER 2005

     Articles:

  • “‘I Shall Enter Her Heart’: Fetishizing Feeling in Clarissa”—Julie Park, p. 371
  • “‘There Are Plenty of Houses’: Architecture and Genre in The Portrait of a Lady”—Elizabeth Boyle Machlan, p. 394
  • “Gissing's Moral Mischief: Prostitutes and Narrative Resolution”—Margaret E. Michell, p. 411
  • “Bringing out the Beast in Melville's Billy Budd: The Dialogue of Darwinian and ‘Holy’ Lexicons on Board the Bellipotent”—Eric Goldman, p. 430
  • “Jane Harrison and Lesbian Plots: The Absent Lover in Virginia Woolf's The Waves”—Patricia Cramer, p. 443
  • “‘The Last to See Them Alive’: Panopticism, the Supervisory Gaze, and Catharsis in Capote's In Cold Blood”—Trenton Hickman
     Review-Essay:

  • “‘Rival Readings: Dickens And....’”—Robert L. Patten
     Reviews:

  • Danius, Sara. The Senses of Modernism: Technology, Perception, and Aesthetics—Joel Dinerstein, p. 487
  • Dewey, Joseph, Steven G. Kellman, and Irving Malin, Eds. Underwords: Perspectives on Don DeLillo'sUnderworld—Joseph S. Walker, p. 489
  • Mullin, Katherine. James Joyce, Sexuality and Social Purity—Richard Rankin Russell, p. 491
  • Scott, R. Neil and Valerie Nye. Postmarked Milledgeville: A Guide to Flannery O'Connor's Correspondence in Libraries and Archives—Virginia Wray, p. 494
  • Turner, Harrier and Adelaida López De Martínez. The Cambridge Companion to the Spanish Novel: From 1600 to the Present—David Wood, p. 495
  • Wood, James. The Irresponsible Self: On Laughter and the Novel—Andrew Harrison, p. 497