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More than four decades after its founding, the Journal of Modern Literature remains a leading scholarly journal in the field of modern and contemporary literature and is widely recognized as such. It emphasizes scholarly studies of literature in all languages, as well as related arts and cultural artifacts, from 1900 to the present. International in its scope, its contributors include scholars from Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, Oceana, and South America.

Monday, July 20, 2020

Linguistic Politics: JML 43.3 (Spring 2020) is now live


JML 43.3 (Spring 2020) on the theme “Linguistic Politics” is now live on JSTOR and on Project Muse.

Content includes the following:

Isabelle Parkinson
Democrat or “imbecile”? Gertrude Stein’s Useful Knowledge and Discourses of Intellectual Disability in the To-day and To-morrow Pamphlet Series
READ FOR FREE

Grant Scott
The Duplicity of the Word in Lynd Ward’s Vertigo (1937) 

Florian Gargaillo
Wistful Lies and Civil Virtues: Randall Jarrell on World War II Propaganda 

Jiang Yunqin
Dialectic of Desire and the Populist Subject in All the King’s Men

Rebecca Couch Steffy
Steve Benson’s “Views of Communist China”: Experimental Form and the Orientalist Trace 

Raymond Blake Stricklin
“I Have Nothing to Say” — John Cage, Biopower, and the Demilitarization of Language

Seth McKelvey
Unstate: Disarticulating State Knowledge and Joan Didion’s Democracy
READ FOR FREE

Alexander Hartley
Beckett’s Legal Scuffles and the Interpretation of the Plays

Tracy A. Stephens
Disrupting the Homoerotic Appeal of State Power in Caryl Churchill’s Drunk Enough to Say I Love You? 

Kirsten Sandrock
Border Temporalities, Climate Mobility, and Shakespeare in John Lanchester’s The Wall 

Elizabeth Scheer
When Artists Respond: Charles Andrews’s Writing Against War 

Daniel Rosenberg Nutters
Aesthetics and Politics Again?

Sean Weidman
Encountering Anew the Ghosts of Modernism

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