[Milton-L] Early Modern Culture
Crystal Bartolovich
clbartol at syr.edu
Fri Feb 27 18:24:41 EST 2009
Hi Everyone,
I'm new to this list (well, I've been lurking for a few weeks, actually) and
wanted to let those of you who may be interested that a new issue of the
journal that I edit-- Early Modern Culture --has just come out:
http://emc.eserver.org.
The current issue does not include any essays about Milton (it's a special
issue on "vagrancy") but previous issues have a number of essays that would
be of special interest to folks on this list-- especially, in issues four
and five.
I copy the entire table of contents below. Check us out! And please feel
free to circulate this info widely . . .
Issue One:
Jean E. Howard: "Civic Institutions and Precarious Masculinity in
Dekker's The Honest Whore"
Theodore B. Leinwand: Response
Peter Stallybrass: "The Value of Culture and the Disavowal of Things"
Crystal Bartolovich: Response
Carol Banks and Graham Holderness: "'Effeminate Dayes'"
Phyllis Rackin: Response
Valerie Wayne: "The Career of Cymbeline's Manacle"
Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr.: Response
The Electronic Seminar:
Jyotsna Singh and Valerie Wayne
Issue Two:
Richard Halpern: "Shakespeare's Perfume"
Jeffrey Masten: Response
Margreta de Grazia: "Hamlet's Thoughts and Antics"
Juliet Fleming: Response
Alan Sinfield: "Selective Quotation"
David Siar: Response
Barbara Sebek: "Good Turns and the Art of Merchandizing:
Conceptualizing Exchange in Early Modern England"
Scott Cutler Shershow: Response
The Electronic Seminar:
Richard Levin and Alan Sinfield
Issue Three:
Dympna Callaghan: "(Un)natural Loving:
Swine, Pets, and Flowers in Venus and Adonis"
Rebecca Ann Bach: Response
Graham Holderness: Ofelia
Laurence Nowel: Excerpta Quaedam Danica (1565)
Arthur Lindley: Response
Peter Hulme: "Stormy Weather:
Misreading the Postcolonial Tempest"
Ania Loomba: Response
Ann Rosalind Jones: "Needle, Scepter, Sovereignty:
The Queen of Sheba in Englishwomen's Amateur Needlework"
Jennifer Summit: Response
The Electronic Seminar:
Graham Holderness and Edward Pechter
Issue Four
Special Issue on Materiality
David Hawkes: "Faust Among the Witches:
Towards an Ethics of Representation"
Natasha Korda: "The Case of Moll Frith:
Women's Work and the 'All-Male Stage'"
Walter Cohen: "Don Quijote and The Intercontinental History of the Novel"
Christopher Kendrick: "'Majestic Unaffected Style':
Quakerism and Improvement in Paradise Regained"
James Holstun:
Comment:
"Historical Materialism and Early Modern Studies"
The Electronic Seminar:
Christopher Kendrick
Issue Five
Christian Thorne: "The Grassy-Green Sea"
Christopher Kendrick: Response
Special Cluster on Early Modern Women
Maureen Quilligan: "When Women Ruled the World:
The Glorious Sixteenth Century"
Margaret Ferguson: "Conning the 'Overseers':
Women's Illicit Work in Behn's 'The Adventure of the Black Lady'"
Jill P. Ingram: "A Case for Credit:
Isabella Whitney's 'Wyll and Testament' and the Mock Testament Tradition"
Julie Crawford: "Women (Authors) on Top"
(A Response to Quilligan, Ferguson, and Ingram)
The Electronic Seminar:
Maureen Quilligan: Response to Julie Crawford
Julie Crawford: Response to Maureen Quilligan's Response
Jill P. Ingram: Response to Julie Crawford
Julie Crawford: Response to Jill P. Ingram's Response
Issue Six
Special Issue: Timely Meditations
Huw Griffiths: "The Sonnet in Ruins:
Time and the Nation in 1599"
Shankar Raman: "Marvell's Now"
Linda Charnes: "Reading for the Wormholes:
Micro-periods from the Future"
Sadia Abbas: "Other People's History:
Contemporary Islam and Figures of Early Modern European Dissent"
Jonathan Gil Harris: "Untimely Mediations"
(A Response to Griffiths, Raman, Charnes, and Abbas)
The Electronic Seminar:
Linda Charnes: Response to Jonathan Gil Harris
Jonathan Gil Harris: Response to Linda Charnes' Response
Special Issue: Vagrant Subjects
Linda Woodbridge:
Introduction
Patricia Fumerton:
"Mocking Aristocratic Place:
The Perspective of the Streets"
Sandra Logan:
"Fright Flight and the Suffering City:
Mobility, Catastrophe, and the State of Emergency"
Martine van Elk:
"'She would tell none other tale':
Narrative Strategies in the Bridewell Court Books
and the Rogue Literature of the Early Modern Period"
A. L. Beier:
"From the Organic Society to Utopian Civic Virtue:
Reforming the Poor and Re-Forming the Social Order in England, 1500-1550"
Craig Dionne:
"'Now For the Lords' Sake':
Vagrancy, Downward Mobility, and Low Aesthetics"
(Response to Fumerton, Logan, van Elk, and Beier)
The Electronic Seminar
Patricia Fumerton
Response to Craig Dionne
Sandra Logan:
Response to Linda Woodbridge and Craig Dionne
--
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