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40.1 and 2—SPRING and SUMMER 2008—Special Number: Postcolonial Trauma Novels

     Articles:

  • “Introduction: Postcolonial Trauma Novels”—Stef Craps and Gert Buelens, p. 1
  • “Journeying through Hell: Wole Soyinka, Trauma, and Postcolonial Nigeria”—Anne Whitehead, p. 13
  • “Who Speaks? Who Listens? The Problem of Address in Two Nigerian Trauma Novels”—Amy Novak, p. 31
  • “The Curse of Constant Remembrance: The Belated Trauma of the Slave Trade in Ayi Kwei Armah’s Fragments”—Laura Murphy, p. 52
  • “’You would not add to my suffering if you knew what I have seen’: Holocaust Testimony and Contemporary African Trauma Literature”—Robert Eaglestone, p. 72
  • “Mortgaged Futures: Trauma, Subjectivity, and the Legacies of Colonialism in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s The Book of Not”—Rosanne Kennedy, p. 86
  • “Apartheid Haunts: Postcolonial Trauma in Lisa Fugard’s Skinner’s Drift”—Mairi Emma Neeves, p. 108
  • “’This text deletes itself’: Traumatic Memory and Space-Time in Zoe Wicomb’s David’s Story”—Shane Graham, p. 127
  • “The Past in the Present: Personal and Collective Trauma in Achmat Dangor’s Bitter Fruit”—Ana Miller, p. 146
  • “The Heterotopic Spaces of Postcolonial Trauma in Michael Ondaatje’s Anil’s Ghost”—Victoria Vurrows, p. 161
  • “’You your best thing, Sethe’: Trauma’s Narcissim”—Petar Ramadanovic, p. 178
  • “Linking Legacies of Loss: Traumatic Histories and Cross-Cultural Empathy in Caryl Phillips’s Higher Ground and The Nature of Blood”—Stef Craps, p. 191
  • “The Trans/historicity of Trauma in Jeannette Armstrong’s Slash and Sherman Alexie’s Indian Killer”—Nancy Van Styvendale, p. 203
  • “Decolonizing Trauma Studies: A Response”—Michael Rothberg, p. 224

40.3—FALL 2008

     Articles:
  • “The Manuscript of Septimius: Revisiting the Scene of Hawthorne’s ‘Failure’”—Magnus Ullén, p. 239
  • “That ‘Old Rigmarole of Childhood’: Fairy Tales and Socialization in Elizabeth Gaskell’s Wives and Daughters”—Carrie Wasinger, p. 268
  • “The Sublime Train of Sight in A Hazard of New Fortune”—Christopher Raczkowski, p. 285
  • “We’re on the Road to Nowhere: Steinbeck and Kerouac, and the Legacy of the Great Depression”—Jason Spangler, p. 308
  • “Realism, Modernism, and the Representation of Memory in Dodie Smith’s I Capture the Castle”—Victorian Stewart, p. 328
     Essay-Reviews:

  • “Representing Violence, Rewriting Empire”—Evan Gottlieb, p. 344
  • “Modern English: Police State, Empire, Cosmopolis”—Stephen Ross, p. 351
     Reviews:

  • Burack, Charles Michael. D. H. Lawrence’s Language of Sacred Experience: The Transfiguration of the Reader—Matt Leone, p. 368
  • Chu, Patricia E. Race, Nationalism and the State in British and American Modernism—Peter Kerry Powers, p. 370
  • Coffman, Christine E. Insane Passions: Lesbianism and Psychosis in Literature and Film—Susan McCabe, p. 371
  • Desmond, John F. Walker Percy’s Search for Community—Wendell Farrell O’Gorman, p. 374
  • Schweizer, Bernard, ed. Rebecca West Today: Contemporary Critical Approaches—Marina Mackay, p. 376
  • Simmons, Ryan. Chestnutt and Realism: A Study of Novels—Cynthia A. Callahan, p. 377
  • Stockton, Kathryn Bond. Beautiful Bottom, Beautiful Shame: Where “Black” Meets “Queer”—Magdalena J. Zabrowska, p. 379
  • Wesley, Marilyn C. Violent Adventure: Contemporary Fiction by American Men—Kevin Alexander Boon, p. 381
  • Wilson, Keith, ed. Thomas Hardy Reappraised: Essays in Honour of Michael Millgate—Laura Green, p. 383

40.4—WINTER 2008

     Articles:

  • “Charlotte Brontë’s Shirley as a Novel of Religious Controversy”—J. Russel Perkin, p. 389
  • Daniel Deronda and the Limits of Sermonic Voice”—Dawn Coleman, p. 407
  • “Relegation and Rebellion: The Queer, the Grotesque, and the Silent in the Fiction of Carson McCullers”—Melissa Free, p. 426
  • “Portraits in Absentia: Repetition, Compulsion, and the Postmodern Uncanny in Paul Auster’s Leviathan”—Scott A. Dimovitz, p. 447
  • “Žižekian Reading: Sex, Politics, and Traversing (the) Fantasy in Toni Morrison’s Paradise”—James M. Mellard, p. 465
     Essay-Reviews:

  • “A Fugitive of Criticism and Taste”—Michael John DiSanto, p. 492
  • “Shifting Conceptions of Englishness: Cultural Manifestations of Multi-Ethnicity, Class, and the City”—Kerstin Frank, p. 501
     Reviews:

  • Dewey, Joseph. Beyond Grief and Nothing: A Reading of Don DeLillo—Elizabeth Rosen, p. 512
  • Grimshaw, Tammy. Sexuality, Gender, and Power in Iris Murdoch’s Fiction—George Klawitter, p. 514
  • Leab, Daniel J. Orwell Subverted: The CIA and the Filming of “Animal Farm”—Janine Utell, p. 515
  • Lee, Stuart D. and Elizabeth Solopova. The Keys of Middle Earth: Discovering Medieval Literature Through the Fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien—Kay Marsh, p. 517
  • Mackay, Marina and Lyndsey Stonebridge, eds. British Fiction After Modernism: The Novel at Mid-Century—Jonathan Bolton, p. 519
  • Murray, Rolland. Our Living Manhood: Literature, Black Power, and Masculine Ideology—Peter Kerry Powers, p. 521
  • Richardson, Brian. Unnatural Voices: Extreme Narration in Modern and Contemporary Fiction—Suzanne Keen, p. 523
  • Steinberg, Theodore. Twentieth-Century Epic Novels—Janis Haswell, p. 524
  • Trogdon, Robert W. The Lousy Racket: Hemingway, Scribners, and the Business of Literature—Zoe Trodd, p. 526