JML 44.1 (Fall 2020) on the theme "Genealogies and Historiographies" is now live on JSTOR at https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jmodelite.44.issue-1 and on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/43684
Contents include:
Genealogies of the Modern
Michael Bedsole
Exteriority and Interiority in T.S. Eliot’s Graduate Work
Ignasi Ribó
“At the farthest pole from man”: Kafka’s Posthuman Outlook on War
John S. Bak
Tennessee Williams’s “Homage to Ophelia (A Pretentious Foreword)” with Commentary
Joseph Darlington
Anthony Burgess and William S. Burroughs: Shared Enemies, Opposed Friends
Kevin McGuirk
“[T]he apple an apple”: Ammons, Bloom, and “the ten thousand things” – with Emerson and Lao Tzu
Dream Historiographies
Clare Udras Ellis
Pursued by Time: The Chronolibidinal Aesthetics of Katherine Mansfield
Annaliese Hoehling
Seeing History in the Baroque Ruins of Elizabeth Bowen’s The Last September: An Indictment of Cosmopolitan Modernity
Liran Razinsky
Psychoanalysis and Autobiography: Leiris, Freud and the Obstacle to Self-Knowledge
Jesse Zuba
Raymond Carver and the Modern Career Imaginary
Bram Mertens
Dread, Desire and Destruction: The Historical Sublime in Erwin Mortier’s Marcel (1999)
Reviews
Elizabeth Scheer
Surveying the Damage: Marina MacKay’s Modernism, War, and Violence
Robert L. Caserio
Audacious Reconciliation
Farisa Khalid
Good, Brave Causes: British Fiction of the 1950s
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