Fall 2020, Vol. 39, No. 2

From the Editor, 214-216 [preface]
Jennifer L. Airey

Articles

“Provide your self of an Aesop”: Mary Davys’s The Fugitive as Fable Collection 217-236 [abstract]
Martha F. Bowden

Embarrassment, Shame and Guilt: Portraits of Mothers and Mother-Daughter Relationships in the Poetry of Selima Hill, 237-260 [abstract]
Lucy Winrow

Beyond Matricide: Maternal Subjectivity, Patriarchy, and Chaos Theory in Fiona Kidman’s Ricochet Baby, 261-284 [abstract]
Doreen D’Cruz

How slippery things can be”:The Trailer Motif in the Work of Annie Proulx, 285-302 [abstract]
Ellen Argyros

Radical Revision: Rewriting Feminism with This Bridge Called My Back and Kate Rushin’s “The Bridge Poem”, 303-328 [abstract]
Lizzy LeRud

Touching Surfaces: Gestures of Love toward the Wounded Sister in Han Kang’s The Vegetarian, 329-347 [abstract]
Joori Joyce Lee

Reviews

Unbinding“The Pillow Book”: The Many Lives of a Japanese Classic, by Gergana Ivanova, 349-351
Joannah Peterson

Intelligent Souls? Feminist Orientalism in Eighteenth-Century English Literature, by Samara Anne Cahill, 352-353
Misty G. Anderson

Religion Around Mary Shelley, by Jennifer L. Airey, 354-356
Staci Stone

Satire, Celebrity, and Politics in Jane Austen, by Jocelyn Harris. The Making of Jane Austen, by Devoney Looser, 357-358
Natasha Duquette

Mina Loy’s Critical Modernism, by Laura Scuriatti, 359-361
Tara Prescott-Johnson

The Outside Thing: Modernist Lesbian Romance, by Hannah Roche, 362-364
Emma Heaney

Returning the Gift: Modernism and the Thought of Exchange, by Rebecca Colesworthy, 365-365
Jennifer Forsberg

Women’s Writing in Canada, by Patricia Demers, 366-379
Patricia Keeney

Bright, by Duanwad Pimwana, translated from Thai by Mui Poopoksakul, 370-372
Janit Feangfu

 

Spring 2020, Vol. 39, No. 1

From the Editor, 7-12 [full preface]
Jennifer L. Airey

Articles

Breastfeeding and Scientific Motherhood: The Case of Marie-Jeanne Roland, 13-38 [abstract]
Annie K. Smart

“Gripping, Grewsome, Great”: Re-Encountering Ellen La Motte’s The Backwash of War through the Lens of Obscenity, 39-60 [abstract]
Layne Parish Craig

“I ain’t you”: Fat and the Female Body in Flannery O’Connor, 61-83 [abstract]
Jennifer Renee Blevins

A “Chosen” P[o]et among [Hu]mans: Denise Levertov’s Pig Dreams Read as a Matrifocal Allegory, 85-104 [abstract]
José Rodríguez Herrera

Out of Order: Women’s Time in Penelope Fitzgerald’s The Blue Flower, 105-122 [abstract]
Merrill Turner

Jackie Kay’s Trumpet: Transnational and Transracial Adoption, Transgender Identity, and Fictions of Transformation, 123-150 [abstract]
Margaret Homans

Notes

The Lim Transcriptions of Anna Letitia Barbauld’s Letters to Lydia Rickards: A Critique, 151-154
William McCarthy

Reviews

Structure and Features of Anna Komnene’s “Alexiad”: Emergence of a Personal History, by Larisa Orlov Vilimonović, 155-157
Penelope Buckley

“The Book of the City of Ladies” and Other Writings by Christine de Pizan, edited and introduction by Rebecca Kingston and Sophie Bourgault, translated from Middle French by Ineke Hardy, 158-160
Geri L. Smith

Wollstonecraft’s Ghost: The Fate of the Female Philosopher in the Romantic Period, by Andrew McInnes. The Female Philosopher and Her Afterlives: Mary Wollstonecraft, the British Novel, and the Transformations of Feminism, 1796-1911, by Deborah Weiss, 161-164
Anne Chandler

Tasteful Domesticity: Women’s Rhetoric and the American Cookbook, 1790-1940, by Sarah Walden, 165-166
Erin Branch

Reconceiving Nature: Ecofeminism in Late Victorian Women’s Poetry, by Patricia Murphy, 167-169
Marion Shaw

Katherine Mansfield and Periodical Culture, by Chris Mourant, 169-172
Carey Snyder

Tillie Olson and the Dialectical Philosophy of Proletarian Literature, by Anthony Dawahare, 173-175
Jennifer Forsberg

Women Writers of the Beat Era: Autobiography and Intertextuality, by Mary Paniccia Carden, 175-178
Isabel Castelao-Gómez

Mean Girl: Ayn Rand and the Culture of Greed, by Lisa Duggan, 179-181
Claudia Franziska Brühwiler

Politics and Affect in Black Women’s Fiction, by Kathy Glass, 181-183
Janaka Lewis

Black Female Vampires in African American Women’s Novels, 1977-2011: She Bites Back, by Kendra R. Parker, 184-186
Shari Evans

Indigenous Women’s Writing and the Cultural Study of Law, by Cheryl Suzack, 186-187
Maggie Ann Bowers

Mary Wollstonecraft Sojourner Truth Margaret Atwood Abigail Adams Amy Tan H.D. Simone de Beauvoir Zora Neale Hurston Frances Burney Virginia Woolf

"The white saxifrage with the indented leafe is moste commended for the breakinge of the Stone."

— Turner, Herbal, III, 68 [1568]