The Feminist Critique: Mastering our Monstrosity, 137-149
Shari Benstock
Articles
A Speaking Sphinx, 151-154
Jane Marcus
Frankenstein and the Feminine Subversion of the Novel, 155-164
Devon Hodges
Creating the Woman Writer: The Autobiographical Works of Jane Barker, 165-181
Jane Spencer
Jane Austen’s Anti-Romantic Fragment: Some Notes on Sanditon, 183-191
John Halperin
Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna’s The Wrongs of Woman: Female Industrial Protest, 193-214
Joseph Kestner
Reflections on Feminism and Pacifism in the Novels of Vera Brittain, 215-228
Muriel Mellown
Review Essay
Reading the Poet and the Poetry: Critics and Emily Dickinson, 229-233
Nancy Walker
Reviews
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman: The Writer as Heroine in American Literature, by Linda Huf, 234-235
Emily Stipes Watts
Ellen Glasgow, by Marcelle Thiébaux; Ellen Glasgow: Beyond Convention, by Linda W. Wagner, 235-238
Mary E. Papke
Djuna: The Life and Times of Djuna Barnes, by Andrew Field, 239-240
Ruth Weston
There’s Always Been a Women’s Movement This Century, by Dale Spender; Samantha Rastles the Woman Question, by Marietta Holley, edited and introduction by Jane Curry, 241-244
Jane Marcus
The Book of the City of Ladies, by Christine De Pizan, translated by Jeffrey Richards, 244-247
Joan M. Ferrante
American Women Writers: A Critical Reference Guide From Colonial Times to the Present, Abridged, edited by Langdon Lynne Faust, 247-250
Nina Baym
Woman and the Demon: The Life of a Victorian Myth, by Nina Auerbach, 250-253
Joseph Kestner
Letters
Letter from Elizabeth H. Hageman, 255
Letter from Margaret D. Stetz, 255
Letter from Katherine Kleeman and Carol Virginia Pohli, 256.