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Academic Journals
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From:Extrapolation (Vol. 50, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed* Science fiction has travelled from being unknown territory to becoming mapped and analysed far beyond the dreams of those individuals--fans and academics--who began the work. But sf has always been bedevilled by...
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From:Extrapolation (Vol. 50, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAmong submissions to the Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts and other journals I read for, I have noticed a growing generation gap (although the division is based on attitude and experience, not necessarily age). On...
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From:Early American Literature (Vol. 43, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedDuring the past decade, literary scholars have produced an impressive list of books and articles in the emerging field of Atlantic literary history. Atlantic historians, however, rarely acknowledge this work and have...
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From:The Hemingway Review (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe John F. Kennedy Library Foundation annually awards up to $5,000 in travel grants (individual awards are limited to $1,000) to support research in the library's Hemingway collection. For more information, and for...
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From:Victorian Studies (Vol. 54, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAs humanists, we believe we are trained as expert readers, able to read almost any kind of text closely, deeply, and critically. But on 21 February 2010, the two of us sat staring at a computer screen dumbfounded by a...
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From:Extrapolation (Vol. 50, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed* While I might ruminate about the general status of science fiction criticism today, I am reluctant to do so, having also addressed the topic in a relatively recent issue of Science Fiction Studies, and on the occasion...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 55, Issue 18)Byline: CAITLIN MORAN It was a case of invention by necessity. While in Europe researching the origins of a poem, Timothy L. Stinson, an assistant professor of English at North Carolina State University, became...
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From:Victorian Poetry (Vol. 43, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedNo great amount of significant scholarship for nineties' figures has appeared this year, though what has is of superior quality. Although most of her work appeared earlier, Mathilde Blind was taken up as something of a...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 52, Issue 17)Byline: JENNIFER HOWARD Either literary theory is dead, or it's invincible. It all depends on who's talking. When Jacques Derrida died last year, The New York Times declared the end of the era of "big ideas." In...
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From:Extrapolation (Vol. 50, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed* There are critical journals that have survived longer than Extrapolation's fifty years, but not many. A half-century of continuous publication by any periodical that offers scholarly analysis of literature is a...
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From:Early American Literature (Vol. 43, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedTo the ear of the literary scholar, a plaintive note rings with particular clarity throughout Eric Slauter's analysis of the trade gap between literary and historical scholarship on the Atlantic world. Literary...
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From:Asian Folklore Studies (Vol. 62, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article intends to trace the development of folktale research and to examine the associated problems and results achieved, as well as present contemporary research issues. It examines research on the background of...
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From:Atlantis, revista de la Asociación Española de Estudios Anglo-Norteamericanos (Vol. 38, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Honorable, Pleasant and Rare Conceited Historie of Palmendos de Anthony Munday esta basado en el primer libro del libro de caballerias espanol Primaleon de Grecia (Salamanca, 1512), que, es, a su vez, la...
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From:Journal of Biblical Literature (Vol. 137, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis issue of the Journal of Biblical Literature marks my last as General Editor. On December 31, 2018, I will conclude a sixteen-year stint with the Journal: nine years as an editorial board member, and seven as...
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From:Wordsworth Circle (Vol. 51, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedRecent critical polemics have largely avoided authorship. Moretti's distant reading, for example, "allows you to focus on units that are much smaller or much larger than the text" (Moretti 48-49). Similarly, "surface"...
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From:Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 (Vol. 40, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedRENAISSANCE VS. EARLY MODERN The "Renaissance" remains a viable title not only for this review but also for many of this year's books. Despite being "regarded with suspicion in many quarters," as Alvin Snider noted...
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From:Early American Literature (Vol. 51, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedLiterary criticism may be nearing the most significant dispositional shift since the advent of New Historicism some thirty years ago. What Paul Ricoeur called "the hermeneutics of suspicion" and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick...
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From:Wordsworth Circle (Vol. 37, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedWith "The Psycho-Aesthetics of Romantic Moonshine," Geoffrey Hartman returns to "paths dear" to him indeed: he too, like the pony, has come this way many times. "Strange Fits of Passion" was one of the opening exhibits...
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From:Essays and Studies (Vol. 2010)IN THE RECENT 2008 Research Assessment Exercise in the United Kingdom--a qualitative audit and analysis of all academics' publications and research--the English Subject Panel made its report on the state of the...
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From:Journeys (Vol. 21, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article explores the ways in which nineteenth-century Argentine author, Eduarda Mansilla de Garcia, engaged with the issues of women and modernity in her 1882 travelogue, Recuerdos de viaje. It argues that the...