This issue features works on myths in Brazil, an assessment of Canadian literature's place in Comparative Literary Studies and, through a wide array of book reviews, the current approaches to postcolonial studies and laws relating to obscenity.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Articles
Commentary
Creative contributions
| Language Portals |
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Micah G Walker |
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Review Article
Book Reviews
| Modernism, Mass Culture, and the Aesthetics of Obscenity |
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Jamie Kathryn Gandy |
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| Blacks and Blackness in Central America: Between Race and Place |
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Annette Quarcoopome |
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| The Traffic in Obscenity from Byron to Beardsley: Sexuality and Exoticism in Nineteenth-Century Print Culture |
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Julian A Ledford |
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| Global Matters: The Transnational Turn in Literary Studies |
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Andrew J. Hines |
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| New World Adams and The Indian Militia |
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Kathleen DeGuzman |
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| Crossing Borders, Claiming a Nation: A History of Argentine Jewish Women |
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Erin Pellarin |
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| Domination Without Dominance |
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Molly Levine |
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| Classics in Post-Colonial Worlds |
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Stephen Andrew Sansom |
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| From the Ground Up: A look at The New Cultural History of Peronism |
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Andrew Merritt |
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| Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America |
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Lacey Saborido |
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| Black and Green |
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Killian Colm Quigley |
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| Licentious Gotham |
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April E Stevens |
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| Multicultiphobia |
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Dan Fang |
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This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
ISSN: 1553-4316