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THE HENRY JAMES REVIEW Volume 12, Number 1 Winter, 1991 Table of Contents A Possible Lair: "The Tigers in India" and "The Beast in the Jungle." By H. Lewis Ulman................................................1 The Economics of Love: The Production of Value in The Golden Bowl. By John Alberti.....................................................9 The Feminine Orphan and the Emergent Master: Self-Realization in Henry James. By William Veeder...............................20 A Memorable Naturalization: How Henry James Became a British Subject and Lost his United States Citizenship. By Alan G. James.................................................55 The Master Lesson: James Reading Shakespeare. By Nina Schwartz.................................................69 Review of Anne T. Margolis, Henry James and the Problem of Audience: An International Act and Jennifer A. Wicke, Advertising Fictions: Literature, Advertisement, and Social Reading. By Michael Anesko...............................................84 Review of H. Meili Steele, Realism and the Drama of Reference: Strategies of Reference in Balzac, Flaubert, and James. By William W. Stowe.............................................87 Review of Brita Lindberg-Seyersted, Ford Madox Ford and His Relationship to Stephen Crane and Henry James. By Joseph Wiesenfarth............................................88 Review of Edgar A. Dryden, The Form of American Romance. By Richard C. Moreland..........................................90 From the Editor Space compels telegraphese, a shorter editorial note than usual (shades of Lydia Touchett). Wonderful James Society meetings at MLA—fine papers, most to appear in an upcoming special feature—and a good business meeting marking progress on the James Society-AMS publishing program and the 1993 Sesquicentennial Symposium. Also approved at the business meeting: a new prize competition, handsomely funded by the Joseph Conrad Society of Great Britain, for three essays each year (one on HJ, one on JC, one on both), beginning in January, 1992 (watch this space for full announcement next issue). And here, as promised, an issue with extra pages—sixteen more than usual—to help clear out the HJR backlog as quickly as possible. Happy New Year. Stop.—DMF ...

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