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39.1—SPRING 2007

     Articles:

  • “Novelty in Novels: A Look at What’s New in Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko”—Emily Hodgson Anderson, p. 1
  • Joseph Andrews and the Control of the Poor”—Christopher Parkes, p. 17
  • “More than a Gravestone: Caleb Williams, Udolpho, and the Politics of the Gothic”—Ingrid Horrocks, p. 31
  • “Difference and Repetition in Austen’s Persuasion”—Lorri G. Nandrea, p. 48
  • “’Worthy Ambition’: Religion and Domesticity in The Daisy Chain”—Melissa Schaub, p. 65
  • “Modernism and the Contours of Violence in D. H. Lawrence’s Fiction”—Michael Squires, p. 84
     Essay-Review:

  • “Tales of Passion”—Martin Stannard, p. 105
     Reviews:

  • Davis, Todd. Kurt Vonnegut’s Crusade: Or, How a Postmodern Harlequin Preached a New Kind of Humanism—Alberto Cacicedo, p. 114
  • Fantina, Richard. Ernest Hemingway: Machismo and Masochism—Thomas Strychacz, p. 116
  • Gaylin, Ann. Eavesdropping in the Novel from Austin to Proust—Michelle Ruggaber Dougherty, p. 118
  • Grass, Sean. The Self in the Cell—Simon Stern, p. 120
  • Hack, Daniel. The Material Interests of the Victorian Novel—Sean Grass, p. 122
  • Keren, Michael. The Citizen’s Voice: Twentieth-Century Politics and Literature—Annette Federico, p. 124
  • McCracken-Flesher, Caroline. Possible Scotlands: Walter Scott and the Story of Tomorrow—Ian Campbell, p. 126
  • Perry, Ruth. Novel Relations: The Transformation of Kinship in English Literature and Culture, 1748-1818—Abby Coykendall, p. 127
  • Pettitt, Clare. Patent Inventions: Intellectual Property and the Victorian Novel—Sundeep Bisla, p. 129

39.2—SUMMER 2007

     Articles:

  • “An Evolutionary Approach to Jane Austin: Prehistoric Preferences in Pride and Prejudice”—Michael J. Stasio and Kathryn Duncan, p. 133
  • “’Have at the masters?’: Literary Allusions in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Mary Barton”—Joanne Wilkes, p. 147
  • “Hardy’s Ur-Priestess and the Phases of a Novel”—Damon Franke, p. 161
  • “Ford and the Costs of Englishness: ‘Good Soldiering’ as Performative Practice”—Sarah Henstra, p. 177
  • “Virginia Woolf’s ‘Wild England’: George Borrow, Autoethnography and Between the Acts”—Helen Southworth, p. 196
  • “The Alchemy of the Self in Angela Carter’s The Passion of New Eve”—Maria del Mar Pérez-Gil, p. 216
     Essay-Review:

  • “Twenty-First Century Conrad Studies”—Michael Lackey, p. 235
     Reviews:

  • Armstrong, Paul B. Play and the Politics of Reading: The Social Uses of Modernist Form—Thomas J. Cousineau, p. 246
  • Brewer, David A. The Afterlife of Character, 1726-1825—Abby Coykendall, p. 247
  • Debellis, Jack, ed. John Updike: The Critical Responses to the ‘Rabbit’ Sagas—Biljana Dojčinović-Nešić, p. 250
  • Haslam, Sara, ed. Ford Madox Ford and the City—Bette H. Kirschstein, p. 251
  • Jackson, Robert Louis. A New Word on “The Brothers Karamazov”—Susan McReynolds, p. 253
  • Kern, Stephen. A Cultural History of Causality: Science, Murder Novels, and Systems of Thought—David L. G. Arnold, p. 255
  • Malak, Amin. Muslim Narratives and the Discourse of English—Ali Behdad, p. 256
  • McDermott, John V. Flannery O’Connor and Edward Lewis Wallant: Two of a Kind—Robert Donahoo, p. 258
  • Morrison, Ray. A Smile in His Mind’s Eye: A Study of the Early Works of Lawrence Durrell—Anna Lillios, p. 259
  • Stout, Janis P. Willa Cather and Material Culture: Real-World Writing, Writing the Real World—John N. Swift, p. 262
  • Su, John J. Ethics and Nostalgia in the Contemporary Novel—Craig McLuckie, p. 263

39.3—FALL 2007

     Articles:

  • “Manly Lessons: Sir Charles Grandison, the Rake, and the Man of Sentiment”—Elaine McGirr, p. 267
  • “The Races of Women: Gender, Hybridity, and National Identity in Dinah Craik’s Olive”—Juliet Shields, p. 284
  • Dracula, Miasma and Germ Theory”—Martin Willis, p. 301
  • “The Perspective of the Look in the Introspective and Truth-Quest Novel”—Florian Bratu, p. 326
  • “Imaging the Past: Cultural Memory in Dubravka Ugrešič’s The Museum of Unconditional Surrender—Monica Popescu, p. 336
     Essay-Reviews:

  • “Jane Austen Once More”—William Baker, p. 357
  • “Delivered in Plain Brown Wrapping: The Naughty Early American Novel”—William J. Scheick, p. 268
     Reviews:

  • Andrews, Sophia. The Pre-Raphaelite Art of the Victorian Novel: Narrative Challenges to Visual Gendered Boundaries—Liana F. Piehler, p. 378
  • Bluemel, Kristin. George Orwell and the Radical Eccentrics: Intermodernism in Literary London—William Laskowski, p. 379
  • Caldwell, Janis. Literature and Medicine in Nineteenth-Century Britain: From Mary Shelley to George Eliot—Stephanie P. Browner, p. 381
  • Castronovo, David. Beyond the Gray Flannel Suit: Books from the 1950s that Made American Culture—Ilse Schrynemakers, p. 384
  • Chase, Karen, ed. Middlemarch in the 21st Century—Margaret Moan Rowe, p. 384
  • Hardy, Clarence E. III. James Baldwin’s God: Sex, Hope, and Crisis in Black Holiness Culture—Peter Kerry Powers, p. 386
  • Johnson, Geroge M. Dynamic Psychology in Modernist British Fiction—Michael Lackey, p. 388
  • Kreilkamp, Ivan. Voice and the Victorian Storyteller and Lougy, Robert E. Inaugural Wounds: The Shaping of Desire in Five Nineteenth-Century Novels—Ilana Blumberg, p. 390
  • Newman, Beth. Subjects on Display: Psychoanalysis, Social Expectation, and Victorian Feminity—Steve Walker, p. 394

39.4—WINTER 2007

     Articles:

  • “Angelic Realism: Domestic Idealization in Mary Shelley’s Lodore”—Nicholas M. Williams, p. 397
  • Asma (1873): The Early Arabic Novel as a Social Compass”—Sharon Halevi and Fruma Zachs, p. 416
  • “’Not a novel, not even a well-ordered story’: Formal Experimentation and Psychological Innovation in Sarah Grand’s The Heavenly Twins”—Adam Seth Lowenstein, p. 431
  • “Dallying with Dailiness: Amit Chaudhuri’s Flâneur Fictions”—Saikat Majumdar, p. 448
  • “Postcolonial Melancholia in Ian McEwan’s Saturday”—Elizabeth Kowaleski Wallace, p. 465
     Essay-Reviews:

  • “The Canonization of Philip Roth”—David Brauner, p. 481
  • “Making Sense of ‘Race’ and Ethnicity in Literature”—Martin Japtok, p. 489
     Reviews:

  • Berman, Ronald. Modernity and Progress: Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Orwell and Nesbitt, Jennifer Poulos. Narrative Settlements: Geographies of British Women’s Fiction Between the Wars—Alissa G. Karl, p. 498
  • Byerman, Keith. Remembering the Past in Contemporary African American Fiction –Rachel Farebrother, p. 501
  • Christensen, Allan Conrad. The Subverting Vision of Bulwer Lytton: Bicentenary Reflections—Meilee D. Bridges, p. 503
  • Cowart, David. Trailing Clouds: Immigrant Fiction in Contemporary America—Dean Franco, p. 505
  • Dore, Florence. The Novel and the Obscene: Sexual Subjects in American Modernism—Heather Love, p. 506
  • Morel, Lucas E., ed. Ralph Elilson and the Raft of Hope: A Political Companion to Invisible Man and Warren, Kenneth W. So Black and Blue: Ralph Ellison and the Occasion of Criticism—Christopher Z. Hobson, p. 508
  • Papayanis, Marilyn Adler. Writing in the Margins: The Ethics of Expatriation from Lawrence to Ondaatje—Allen Hibbard, p. 512
  • Rawlings, Peter. American Theorists of the Novel: Henry James, Lionel Trilling, Wanye C. Booth—Jerry A. Varsava, p. 515
  • Walker, Maggie and Mark Walker. Dreiser’s “Other Self”: The Life of Arthur Henry—Stephen C. Brennan, p. 517
  • Winnberg, Jakob. An Aesthetics of Vulnerability: The Sentimentum and the Novels of Graham Swift—Daniel Lea, p. 519