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Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to announce the next issue and the beginning of a new
volume of Early Modern Literary Studies. Our table of contents is below;
as you'll see this is an "all Shakespeare" issue which we hope will
generate much comment through our Readers' Forum. You'll also see that we
have a new format, an expanded electronic resources section, and many more
reviews.
EMLS can be found at
http://unixg.ubc.ca:7001/0/e-sources/emls/emlshome.html
and at our Oxford mirror site
http://sable.ox.ac.uk/~emls/emlshome.html
The journal is also available via e-mail in an ASCII version. To
subscribe, please send a message to [log in to unmask]
Comments are always welcome; the editors can be contacted at
[log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]
Joanne Woolway
Associate Editor, EMLS
---------------------------
Early Modern Literary Studies 2.1 (April 1996): Contents
Foreword:
*Critical Shakespeare. Joanne Woolway, Oriel College, Oxford.
Articles:
*Personations: The Taming of the Shrew and the Limits of
Theoretical Criticism. Paul Yachnin, University of British
Columbia.
*The Madness of Syracusan Antipholus. Robert Viking O'Brien,
California State University, Chico.
*"The price of one fair word": Negotiating Names in Coriolanus.
David Lucking, University of Lecce, Italy.
*Certain Speculations on Hamlet, the Calendar, and Martin Luther.
Steve Sohmer.
Note:
*Blending Popular Culture and Religious Instruction: Herbert's
Outlandish Proverbs. Paul Moon, Auckland Institute of Technology,
NZ.
Reviews:
*Eric S. Mallin. Inscribing the Time: Shakespeare and the End of
Elizabethan England. Berkeley: U of California P, 1995. Tony
Dawson, University of British Columbia.
*The Reign of Elizabeth I: Court and Culture in the Last Decade.
Ed. John Guy. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1995. Henry VIII in
History, Historiography and Literature. Ed. Uwe Baumann. Bern:
Peter Lang, 1992. Steven Gunn, Merton College, Oxford.
*Renaissance Culture in Context: Theory and Practice. Eds. Jean R.
Brink and William F. Gentrup. Aldershot: Scholar P; Brookfield,
Vt: Ashgate Publishing Company, 1993. A.W. Johnson, Abo Akademi
University, Finland.
*John Donne. Pseudo-Martyr. Ed. Anthony Raspa. Montreal:
McGill-Queen's UP, 1993. Dennis Flynn. John Donne and the
Ancient Catholic Nobility. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1995.
Elizabeth Hodgson, University of British Columbia.
*William M. Hamlin. The Image of America in Montaigne, Spenser, and
Shakespeare: Renaissance Ethnography and Literary Reflection. New
York: St. Martin's P, 1995. Donna C. Woodford, Washington
University at St Louis.
*Michael Murrin. History and Warfare in Renaissance Epic. Chicago:
U of Chicago P, 1995. James Loxley, University of Leeds.
*Richard Strier. Resistant Structures: Particularity, Radicalism,
and Renaissance Texts. Berkeley: U of California P, 1995. Mark
Robson, University of Leeds.
*Jonathan Sawday. The Body Emblazoned: Dissection and the Human
Body in Renaissance Culture. London: Routledge, 1995. Mary Bly,
Washington University at St Louis.
*English Verse Drama: The Full-Text Database. Cambridge:
Chadwyck-Healey, 1995. David L. Gants, University of Virginia.
*"That nobility and sweet discourse": Review of the SHAKSPER
Listserv Discussion Group. Sean Lawrence, University of British
Columbia.
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