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Current, previous
and forthcoming issues
Current Issue
Issue 2
(Winter 2004)
Madame de Staël and
Corinne in England
Essays |
Cora Kaplan,
Introduction |
see
abstract |
Angela Wright, Corinne
in Distress: Translation as Cultural Misappropriation
|
see
abstract |
Emma Francis, "I
like solitude before a Mirror...". Corinne and Marie Bashirktseff
|
see
abstract |
Ann T. Gardiner, The
Gender of Fame: Remembering Santa Croce in Mme de Staël 's
Corinne and Lord Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage
IV
|
see
abstract |
Kate Davies,
Pantomime, Connoisseurship, Consumption:
Emma Hamilton and the Politics of Embodiment |
see
abstract |
Orianne
Smith, British Women Writers
and Eighteenth-Century Representations of the Improvisatrice |
see
abstract |
Sylvia Bordoni,
Parodying Corinne: Mrs Foster's
The Corinna of England |
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Reviews |
Frances Dann, Maria
Fairweather, Madame de Staël (London: Constable and
Robinson, 2005)
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Synopses |
Natalie Neill, Mrs
Bullock, Susanna; or, Traits of a Modern Miss (London, 1795)
Natalie Neill, Eliza
Fenwick, Secresy; or, The Ruin on the Rock (London, 1795)
Natalie Neill,
Zofloya: or, The Moor; a Romance of the Fifteenth Century
(1806)
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Bibliography |
Averill Buchanan, Mary
Tighe (1772-1810)
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Previous Issue:
Issue 1: Summer
2004: Papers from the inaugural Chawton House Conference, Women's Writing
in Britain 1660-1830, July 2003
Essays |
|
see
abstract |
Jacqueline Pearson, Mothering
the Novel: Frances Burney and the Next Generation of Women Novelists |
see
abstract |
Angela Smallwood, Women
Playwrights, Politics and Convention: the Case of Elizabeth Inchbald's
'Seditious'
Comedy, Every One Has His Fault (1793)
|
see
abstract |
Teresa Barnard,
Anna Seward and the Battle for
Authorship |
|
Laura L. Runge, Churls
and Graybeards and Novels Written by a Lady: Gender in Eighteenth-Century
Book Reviews |
|
Lilla
Maria Crisafulli, Letitia
Elizabeth Landon's Castruccio Castrucani: Gender Through History |
|
Cynthia Lawford, Turbans,
Tea and Talk of Books: the Literary Parties of Elizabeth Spence and
Elizabeth Benger |
|
Isabell
Achterberg, Early Nineteenth-Century
Women Writing Men: Men, Masculinity and the Struggle for Male Authority
in the Fiction of Minerva Press Writer Amelia Beauclerc
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Forthcoming Issue
Issue 3 (Summer 2005) Romantic-era Writing for Children
|
Karín
Lesnik-Oberstein, Reflections on the Papers Delivered at the Conference
on 'Romantic-Era Writing for Children', 29th May 2004: 'History, Literature,
and the Return of the Real Child'.
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Stephen Bygrave, Enlightenment
for beginners |
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Matthew Grenby, Early
British Children's Books: Towards an Understanding of their Users
and Usage |
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Susan Manly, Autonomy
and Authority in Practical Education (1798) |
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Tom Furniss, Reading
Children/Children Reading: The Problematic Nature of Eighteenth-Century
Children's Literature in Locke, Rousseau and Day (Tom Furniss, University
of Strathclyde) |
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Laura Smith, "You
cannot be children always": Eliza Fenwick's Visits to the Juvenile
Library and the production of the Reading Subject. |
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Penny Brown, Tales
of Castle and Cottage : Mme de Genlis and women writers for children
in the Romantic period.
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