Articles in this issue
- The False Domesticity of A Woman Killed with Kindness
Lisa Hopkins, and [else], Vol. 4: 1-7 - A very Antony: Patterns of Antonomasia in Shakespeare1)
Donald Cheney, and [else], Vol. 4: 8-24 - Competing Discourses in The Winter's Tale
David Laird, and [else], Vol. 4: 25-43 - Liberty, Corruption and Seduction in the Republican Imagination
Tara Fitzpatrick, and [else], Vol. 4: 44-66 - "Novels are ... the most dangerous kind of reading": Metafictional Discourse in Early American Literature2)
Jürgen Wolter, and [else], Vol. 4: 67-82 - Subjected People: Towards a Grammar for the Underclass in Elizabeth Bishop's Poetry
Jonathan Ausubel, and [else], Vol. 4: 83-97 - Derek Walcott's Don Juans
D. L. MacDonald, and [else], Vol. 4: 98-118 - Imagining Voices in A View of the Present State of Ireland: A Discussion of Recent Studies Concerning Edmund Spenser's Dialogue
John M. Breen, and [else], Vol. 4: 119-32 - A Response to Debra Fried
Judith Dundas, and [else], Vol. 4: 133-35 - Tom Jones and the 'Clare-obscure': A Response to Andrew Varney, Bernard Harrison, and Lothar Černý
Mark Loveridge, and [else], Vol. 4: 136-50 - If Everything Else Fails, Read the Instructions: Further Echoes of the Reception-Theory Debate
Leona Toker, and [else], Vol. 4: 151-64 - More on "Christmas as Humbug: A Manuscript Poem by Letitia Elizabeth Landon ('L. E. L.')"
F. J. Sypher, and [else], Vol. 4: 165-68 - Owen's strange "Meeting": A Note for Professor Muir
Jon Silkin, and [else], Vol. 4: 169-71 - Elizabeth Bishop and a Grammar for the Underclass? Response to Jonathan Ausubel's "Subjected People in the Poetry of Elizabeth Bishop"
Jacqueline Vaught Brogan, and [else], Vol. 4: 172-80