FEMINISM AND TIME
From the Editor: Feminism and Time, 5-12
Holly Laird
Articles
Feminist Futures?, 13-20 [abstract]
Elizabeth Grosz
Telling Time in Feminist Theory, 21-28 [abstract]
Rita Felski
Feminism, Ethics, and History, or What Is the “Post” in Postfeminism?, 29-44 [abstract]
Misha Kavka
Is Feminism a Historicism?, 45-66 [abstract]
Jennifer L. Fleissner
Gendering Time in Globalization: The Belatedness of the Other Woman and Jamaica Kincaid’s Lucy, 67-83 [abstract]
Betty Joseph
Found Footage: Feminism Lost in Time, 85-98 [abstract]
Dana Heller
Refusing History at the End of the Earth: Ursula Le Guin’s “Sur” and the 2000-01 Women’s Antarctica Crossing, 99-121 [abstract]
Elena Glasberg
Reviews
Women’s Writing of the First World War: An Anthology, edited by Angela K. Smith; The Second Battlefield: Women, Modernism, and the First World War, by Angela K. Smith, 123-128
Geneviève Brassard
Lesbian Empire: Radical Crosswriting in the Twenties, by Gay Wachman, 128-129
Robin Hackett
Feminism and Film, edited by E. Ann Kaplan, 129-133
Jeffrey S. Longacre
The Language of Inquiry, by Lyn Hejinian, 133-136
Lynn Keller
Traditions of Victorian Women’s Autobiography: The Poetics and Politics of Life Writing, by Linda H. Peterson, 137-140
Carol Hanbery MacKay
The Bitch is Back: Wicked Women in Literature, by Sarah Appleton Aguiar, 140-142
Elizabeth McGeachy Mills
Advancing Sisterhood? Interracial Friendships in Contemporary Southern Fiction, by Sharon Monteith, 142-144
Ivy Schweitzer