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Contents
An Interview with Susan Howe conducted by Lynn Keller
The Company Poets Keep: Allusion, Echo, and the Question of Who Is Listening in W. H. Auden and James Merrill by Jeffrey Donaldson
Penelope Reworking the Twill: Patchwork, Writing, and Lyn Hejinian’s My Life by Craig Douglas Dworkin
After The Tempest: Shakespeare, Postcoloniality, and Michelle Cliff’s New, New World Miranda by Thomas Cartelli
“All names mean something”: Salman Rushdie’s Haroun and the Legacy of Islam by Aron R. Aji
The Momentum of Word-Magic in James Dickey’s The Eye-Beaters, Blood, Victory, Madness, Buckhead and Mercy by Robert Kirschten
Reviews
Once Again, from the Top: More Pomo Promo by Linda Hutcheon
Is Derrida a Quasi-Transcendental Philosopher? by Richard Rorty
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Contents
Samuel Beckett's Revised Aphorisms by Rubin Rabinovitz
Paradise and Loss in the Mirror Vision of Breyten Breytenbach by Brian F. Doherty
“Our Days Put on Such Reticence”: The Rhetoric of the Closet in John Ashbery’s Some Trees by Catherine Imbriglio
Identity, Masculinity, and Desire in David Bradley’s Fiction by Cathy Brigham
The Charred Heart of Polyphemus: Tantric Ecstasy and Shamanic Violence in Robert Kelly’s The Loom by Edward Schelb
Reviews
Samuel Beckett: Tradition and Innovation by Melvin J. Friedman
Anthologies, Poetry, and Postmodernism by Hank Lazer
Efforts of Influence: Moore and Bishop by Ann Keniston
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Contents
An Interview with David Wojahn conducted by Jonathan Veitch
This Doubly-Reflected Communication: Philip Roth’s “Autobiographies” by Elaine M. Kauvar
Pain and the Unmaking of Self in Toni Morrison’s Beloved by Kristin Boudreau
Articulating the Inarticulate: Singularities and the Counter-method in Susan Howe by Ming-Qian Ma
Cultural Capital and Contrarian Investing: Robert Stone, Thom Jones, and Others by James D. Bloom
Borderland Voices in Contemporary Native American Poetry by Robin Riley Fast
Reviews
“There Is No God and Mary Is His Mother”: American Catholicism/American Culture by Jonathan Veitch
Not-So-Distant Relations: Mass Culture and Literary Capital in Twentieth-Century American Literature by Paula Geyh
The Welty Boom! by Jonathan Smith
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Contents
An Interview with Nadine Gordimer conducted by Nancy Topping Bazin
“The Self Regained”: Cyberpunk’s Retreat to the Imperium by Sharon Stockton
Spaced Out: Signification and Space in Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy by Steven E. Alford
A New “Other” Emerges in American Jewish Literature: Philip Roth’s Israel Fiction by Andrew Furman
Memory, Language, and Society in Salman Rushdie’s Haroun and the Sea of Stories by Suchismita Sen
The House a Ghost Built: Allegory, Nommo, and the Ethics of Reading in Toni Morrison’s Beloved by William R. Handley
Reviews
The Sixties Past and Present by Philip K. Jason
The Personal Turn: Of Senior Feminists, Silence, and the Pastness of the Present by Elizabeth Hirsh
Who Needs Neo-Augustanism? On British Poetry by Keith Tuma
Index to Volumes 35 and 36
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