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Check here for updates about our latest issues, calls for papers, submission guidelines and tips, as well special online-only content. Our issues themselves are available at Project Muse and are archived on JSTOR . Check out the "Read for Free" page to enjoy some featured content.



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.

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

JML 44.3 (Spring 2021) is LIVE!

 


JML 44.3 (Spring 2021) is now available. Find it on JSTOR at https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jmodelite.44.issue-3 and on Project Muse at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/45120


From modernist impasses to our post-literary moment

Mi Jeong Lee

The Ugly Politics of (Im)passivity, or Why Conrad’s Anarchists are Fat


Laurel Harris

Impassagenwerk: Jean Rhys’s Interwar Fiction and the Modernist Impasse

FREE!


Elysia Balavage

Illumination, Transformation, and Nihilism: T. S. Eliot’s Empty Spaces


Alexandra Edwards 

Orlando: A Fanfiction; or, Virginia Woolf in the Archive of Our Own


Louis Armand

“He Proves by Algebra”: James Joyce’s Post-Literary Incest Machines


Infinities of the post-

Arleen Ionescu 

Blanchot in Infinite Conversation(s) with Beckett 


Jeffrey Peer 

Hot Spinsters: Revisiting Barbara Pym’s Virtuous Style


Farah Ali

Freedom as a Mirage: Sexual Commodification in Harold Pinter’s Films


Renée Tursi

Searching Pragmatism in Marilynne Robinson 


Marija Grech

Re-Visions of the End: Christine Brooke-Rose and the Post-Literary 

FREE!


Reviews

Jonathan Culler

Intertexts of Intertextuality 


Robert Savino Oventile

Transports, Earthbound


Omri Moses

Technological Paranoia: A Review of Andrew Gaedtke’s Modernism and the Machinery of Madness


James Martell

Logic of Missed Encounters: A Review of Arka Chattopadhyay’s Beckett, Lacan, and the Mathematical Writing of the Real 


Ruben Borg

Beckett’s Insistent Bodies


Susan Mooney

The Insider’s View of Beckett’s Re-Generating Art


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