43.1 Summer 2013
Melissa Schaub on middlebrow feminism | Mara Reisman visits Cold Comfort Farm | Four pieces from Lydia Davis | Angela Laflen puts wikis to work | Four reviews
Melissa Schaub on middlebrow feminism | Mara Reisman visits Cold Comfort Farm | Four pieces from Lydia Davis | Angela Laflen puts wikis to work | Four reviews
Trevor Cook brings us the correspondence of Harold Bloom and Northrop Frye | Nadia Nurhussein examines dialect in ‘Sleeping with the Dictionary’ | Fiction from Hilary Plum and five peomes by Zach Savich | Betsy A. Bowen and Sally O’Driscoll take on the relationship between comp and lit | Four reviews | NeMLA notes
Betina Entzminger interviews Louis Bayard | Jacqueline Foertsch looks at interracial sex and survival in post-nuclear films | Stories galore from Jaime Warburton and Noel Sloboda | Karen Cardozo looks at life after tenure | Five great reviews
41.2 (Winter 2012) Articles: Mexico and Weimar’s Anti-Authoritarian Socialist Imagination: Storytelling, Working, and “Unworking” in B. Traven Martin Kley “Die lange blutige Literatursitzung:” Veit Miiller’s Interrogation of the Writing Process […]
41.1 (Summer 2011) nine eleven + ten in literature, popular culture, and the classroom Introduction and Acknowledgments Justine Dymond Crisis of Memory: Memorializing 9/11 in the Comic Book Universe Cathy J. […]
40.2 (Winter 2011) Articles: “A Multitude of Drops”: Recursion and Globalization in David Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas Jason Howard Mezey “His home is not the land”: Caretaking, Domesticity, and Gender in The Grapes […]
40.1 (Summer 2010) Articles: “‘This Hideous Drama of Revivification’: Poe’s Fiction and Reprint Culture” Carl Ostrowski “The Wisdom of Anne Bradstreet: Eschewing Eve and Emulating Elizabeth” Jacqueline Foertsch Profession & […]
39.2 (Winter 2010) Articles: Mrs. Darcy’s Daughter: An Unpublished Play by Charles W. Chesnutt Introduction Matthew Wilson and Anne Marie McDonald Mrs. Darcy’s Daughter Charles W. Chesnutt Responses Robert Nowatzki, […]
39.1 (Summer 2009) Articles: “An Interview with Porochista Khakpour” Jessica Boudakian Introduction by Jessica Boudakian and Patrick T. Henry “Dystopic Visions in a World of Illusion: El desengaño en un […]
38.2 (Winter 2009) Collaborations: NeMLA at 40 Collaborating with History: Nineteenth-Century African American (Auto)biography “Introduction and Acknowledgments” Jason Haslam “‘The Poets are With Us’: Frederick Douglass and John Milton” Melissa […]
38.1 (Summer 2008) Articles: “Christopher Isherwood and Virginia Woolf: Diaries and Fleeting Impressions of Fascism” Judy Suh “Inquisitorial Theatrics and Errant Subjects in Don Quixote” Ryan Prendergast “Torture, Modern Experience, […]
37.2 (Winter 2008) Articles: “Spirit Photography and the Victorian Culture of Mourning” Jen Cadwallader “An Interview with Fay Weldon” Mara Reisman “Oedison Rex: The Art of Media Metaphor in Don […]
37.1 (Summer 2007) Articles: “The Sociology of Thackeray’s “Howling Wilderness”: Selfishness, Secrecy and Performance in Vanity Fair” Leila S. May Profession & Pedagogy: “Untranslatable? Making American Literature in Translation Digital” […]
About Modern Language Studies Modern Language Studies was first published in February, 1971 by the Officers and Executive Council of the Northeast Modern Language Association. Its first Editor was Frederick […]
Submission Guidelines By submitting an article, an essay for Profession & Pedagogy, or a review to MLS the author certifies that they have not been simultaneously submitted to, or have […]
About Modern Language Studies Modern Language Studies was first published in February, 1971 by the Officers and Executive Council of the Northeast Modern Language Association. Its first Editor was Frederick M. Burelbach, […]
Editorial Staff MLS is edited and produced in the Department of English & Creative Writing at Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA. Staff Editor Laurence Roth Creative Director Mark Fertig Associate […]
MLS Subscriptions The only way for individuals to subscribe to MLS is to become a member of NeMLA, which offers many other benefits in addition to the journal. Institutions: $65.00 […]