Etudes anglaises
Klincksieck

I.S.B.N.sans
128 pages

p. 511 à 513
doi: en cours

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Revue des revues

Tome 57 2004/4

2004 Études anglaises Revue des revues

Revue des revues

American Literature. — Vol. 76, nËš 3 (September 2004). C. CASTIGLIA and R. CASTRONOVO : Preface: A “Hive of Subtlety”: Aesthetics and the End(s) of Cultural Studies. — J. DAWES : Fictional Feeling: Philosophy, Cognitive Science, and the Americain Gothic. — P. GILMORE : Romantic Electricity, or the Materiality of Aesthetics. — E. MADDOCK DILLON : Sentimental Aesthetics. — W.C. DIMOCK : Aesthetics at the Limits of the Nation: Kant, Pound, and the Saturday Review. — T.H. KANE : Mourning the Promised Land: Martin Luther King Jr.’s Automortography and the National civil Rights Museum. — C. NEALON : Camp Messianism, or, the Hopes of Poetry in Late-Late Capitalism.
Diacritics. — Vol. 32, n° 1 (Spring 2002). S. JARVIS : An Undeleter for Criticism. — P. DE BOLLA : Toward the Materiality of Aesthetic Experience. — H. CAYGILL : Barthes and the Lesson of Saenredam. — D. RILEY : “What I want back is what I was”: Consolation’s Retrospect. — D. MILNE : The Beautiful Soul: From Hegel to Beckett. — J.M. BERNSTEIN : Readymades, Monochromes, Etc.: Nominalism and the Paradox of Modernism.
The Eighteenth Century. — Vol. 43, n° 3 (Fall 2002). J. O’BRIEN : Theater and Theatricality. — K. SOLGA : The Savage Ambivalence of Delisle de la Drevetière. — L.A. FREEMAN : The Cultural Politics of Antitheatricality: The Case of John Home’s Douglas. — H. McPHERSON : Theatrical Riots and Cultural Politics in Eighteenth-Century London. — N. BALDYGA : Political Bodies and Bodies Politic: Cultural Identity and the Actor in G.E. Lessing’s Hamburg Dramaturgy. — W.C. NIELSEN : Staging Rousseau’s Republic: French Revolutionary Festivals and Olympe de Gouges. — C. FEILLA : Performing Virtue: Pamela on the French Revolutionary Stage, 1793. — Vol. 44, n° 1 (Spring 2003). W. KOLBRENER : Gendering the Modern: Mary Astell’s Feminist Historiography. — J. SIMON : On Collecting Culture in Graffigny : The Construction of an « Authentic » Péruvienne. — J. PARK : Unheimlich Maneuvers: Enlightenment Dolls and Repetitions in Freud. — D. NEEDLEMAN ARMINTOR : “Go, Get Your Husband Put into Commission”: Fielding’s Tom Thumb Plays and the Labor of Little Men. — A. CONWAY : Flesh on the Mind: Behn Studies in the New Millennium.
English Studies. — Vol. 85, n° 3 (June 2004). W. ROTHWELL : A Mere Quibble ? Multilingualism and English Etymology. — A. LANDAU : « Past Thought of Human Reason »: Confounding Reason in The Comedy of Errors. — S. OHLANDER and G. BERGH : Taliban – A Rogue Word in Present-Day English Grammar. — C. BENNETT : Current Literature 2002. I. New Writing: Poetry. — G.Y.W. TSE : A Grammatical Study of Personal Names in Present-Day English: with Special Reference to the Usage of the Definite Article.
Les Langues Modernes. — Vol. 98, n° 2 (avril 2004). T. BILBAO : Les pratiques de choix de langues vivantes au collège. — P. FRAH : Développement du multilinguisme à l’université. — C. TARDIEU : Quelques réflexions sur le compte rendu de l’évaluation des compétences en anglais des élèves de 15 à 16 ans dans sept pays européens.
PMLA. — Vol. 119, n° 3 (May 2004). M.L. PRATT : Language, Liberties, Waves, and Webs—Engaging the Present. — M.S. BARR : Textism—An Emancipation Proclamation. — A.M. DAVIS ROGAN : Alien Sex Acts in Feminist Science Fiction: Heuristic Models for Thinking a Feminist Future of Desire. — E.S. RABKIN : Science Fiction and the Future of Criticism. — J. DONAWERTH : Body Parts: Twentieth-Century Science Fiction Short Stories by Women. — N.K. HAYLES and N. GESSLER : The Slipstream of Mixed Reality: Unstable Ontologies and Semiotic Markers in The Thirteenth Floor, Dark City and Mulholland Drive. — S.R. DELANY : Joanna Russ and D. W. Griffith.
PoznaÅ„ Studies in Contemporary Linguistics. — N° 39 (2004). D. KLIMERK and B. ROZWADOWSKA : From Psych adjectives to Psych verbs. — M. MOSS : Expanding Agree. — E. RUDNICKA-MOSIÄ„DZ : The role of the perfective aspect in the interpretation of NPs. — P. TAJSNER : Object Shift and movement in the phonological component in the DBP framework. — J. WITKOÅš : Raising expletives. — J. WITKOÅš : Reviewing phrases: On some concepts and consequences of phase-based minimalism.
Shakespeare Quarterly. — Vol. 55, n° 1 (Spring 2004). D. KATHMAN : Grocers, Goldsmiths, and Drapers: Freemen and Apprentices in the Elizabethan Theater. — W. POOLE : False Play: Shakespeare and Chess.
Shakespeare Studies. — Vol. 40 (2002). C. HANABUSA : The Printing of Thomas Lodge’s The Wounds of Civil War (1594). — M. DRAUDT : The Impact of Titus Andronicus on The Revenger’s Tragedy. — Y. SUGIURA : A Reconsideration of the “Incomplete” Sly-Framework in The Taming of the Shrew. — A. POOLE : Shakespeare and the Risk of Contagion.
The Southern Quarterly. — Vol. 42, n° 3 (Spring 2004). D.J. MICKELSEN : “You Ain’t Never Caught a Rabbit”: Covering and Signifyin’ in Alice Walker’s “Nineteen Fifty-Five.” — B. COSTELLO : Playing Lady and Imitating Aristocrats: Race, Class, and Money in Delta Wedding and The Ponder Heart. — D. HARBOUR UNRUE : Katherine Anne Porter’s “Magic”: Levels of Meaning in a Neglected Masterpiece. — S. DENMAN : Political Playing for the Soul of the American South: Theater and the Maintenance of Cultural Hegemony in the American Bible Belt. — E. PIACENTINO : “The common humanity that is in us all”: Toward Racial Reconciliation in Gaines’s A Lesson Before Dying. — S. FORD : The Death of the Author: Eudora Welty’s Canonical Status. — J. McMULLEN : Gail Godwin’s Message: To Those Who Want Wholeness. — T.F. HADDOX : Making Patriarchy Work for You: Jill Conner Browne’s Southern Retrofeminist Conduct Manuals. — C.A. PEEK : “That Evening Sun(g)”: Blues Inscribing Black Space in White Stories. — D. COHN : The South and the Caribbean.
Studies in English Literature. — N° 45 (2004). M. HIRABAYASHI : Women Hating: Christina Rossetti’s Resistance to Gender Structure in “Sister Poems.” — R. NUNN : Jane Austen: Discourse Analyst. — S. NIMURA : On Inheritance Phenomena in Nominalization. — Y. SHIMOTORI : The Evil Flood Welling Up from the Core of Asia: St. Mawr and Anxiety of Empire. — K. ASHIZU : Hamlet in the Context of French-English Royal Politics. — Y. KAKIGUCHI : The Disappearance of Boundary: All That Fall as a Landmark.
Studies in English Literature 1500-1900. — Vol. 44, n° 3 (Summer 2004). J. CLEGG : Swift on False Witness. — T. JONES : Pope’s Epistle to Bathurst and the Meaning of Finance. — P. THOMPSON : Duck, Collier, and the Ideology of Verse Forms. — R. TERRY : David Simple and the Fallacy of Friendship. — S.A. RAYNIE : Francis Hayman Reading Paradise Lost in the 1740s. — M.N. POWELL : Johnson and His “Readers” in the Epistolary Rambler Essays. — C.F. LOAR : Nostalgic Correspondence and James Boswell’s Scottish Malady. — J. NOGGLE : Literary Taste as Counter-Enlightenment in Hume’s History of England.
VQR. — Vol. 80, n° 3 (Summer 2004). T. GENOWAYS : Can Stories Matter ? — Short stories by D. ALARCÓN, D. BAKOPOULOS, M. FEITELL, B. CLARKE, C. HENRIQUEZ, S. ALMOND, P.H. DAVIES, T. NISSEN, H. HABILA, T. BISSELL, C. NGOZI ADICHIE, D. STOLAR, M. TANNER, J. HAIGH, J. McNALLY. — R. McLARTY : Pinch Me; or, How Stephen King Changed My Life.
The Yale Review. — Vol. 92, n° 3 (July 2004). A. HECHT : Keats’s Appetite. — S. LERER : Children’s Literature and the Art of Forgetting. — P.S. HAWKINS : Tough Love: Dante among the Sodomites. — P. MARANTZ COHEN : The Figure Not in the Carpet: Bernard Berenson and Henry James’s Rejection of the Modern in The Outcry. — S. YENSER : Inkles, Shreds, and Scales.
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