In this Issue
Modernism/modernity focuses on the methodological, archival, and theoretical approaches particular to modernist studies. It encourages an interdisciplinary approach linking music, architecture, the visual arts, literature, and social and intellectual history. The journal's broad scope fosters dialogue about the history of modernism and its relations to modernization. Each issue features a selection of essays as well as book reviews. Additional articles and other peer-reviewed formats appear on the journal's Print Plus platform (modernismmodernity.org). Modernism/modernity is the official journal of the Modernist Studies Association (MSA). Winner of six awards from CELJ.
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Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 9, Number 1, January 2002Editorial Board
Editors
Cassandra Laity, Drew University
Robert von Hallberg, University of Chicago
Lawrence Rainey, University of York
Managing Editors
Rebecca Wisor, Drew University
Matthew Hofer, University of Chicago
Christine Berberich, University of York
Editorial Interns
Scott Ebner, Drew University
Dave Maloney, University of Chicago
Editorial Board
National Literatures
Mary Glück, Brown University / Central Europe
Denis Hollier, New York University / France
Paolo Valesio, Yale University / Italy
Guido Guglielmi, University of Bologna / Italy
Jeffrey Schnapp, Stanford University / Italy
Dorothea Dornhof, Humboldt University / Berlin / Germany
Roberto González-Echevarría, Yale University / Spain and Latin America
Sonia Mattalia, University of Valencia / Spain and Latin America
Claude Rawson, Yale University / United Kingdom
A. Walton Litz, Princeton University / United Kingdom and United States
Marjorie Perloff, Stanford University / United Kingdom and United States
Ronald Bush, St. John's College, Oxford University / United Kingdom and United States
The Arts
Robert Morgan, Yale University / Music
Richard Taruskin, University of California at Berkeley / Music
Charles Harrison, Open University / Visual Arts
Patricia Leighten, Duke University / Visual Arts
Francesco Dal Co, Yale University / Architecture
Kenneth Frampton, Columbia University / Architecture
Intellectual History and Social Theory
Pierre Bourdieu, Collège de France / Sociology and the Arts
Martin Jay, University of California at Berkeley /Intellectual History
Anthony Giddens, King's College, Cambridge University / Social Theory
Robert Wohl, University of California at Los Angeles / Continental Culture
Arthur Danto, Columbia University / Philosophy and Aesthetics
Vincent Crapanzano, CUNY Graduate School / Anthropology
Paul DiMaggio, Princeton University / Sociology
Other Fields
Rachel Blau Duplessis, Temple University / Gender and Modernism
Lisa Tickner, Middlesex University / History of Feminism
Emilio Gentile, University of Rome / Fascism
Jerome McGann, University of Virginia / Nineteenth-Century Literature
Karlheinz Barck, Max Planck Center, Berlin / Avant-Garde Culture
Peter Galison, Harvard University / History of Science
Jean-Michel Rabaté, University of Pennsylvania / Literary Modernism
Michael André Bernstein, University of California at Berkeley / Literary Modernism
Peter Jelavich, University of Texas / German Culture
John Sutherland, California Institute of Technology / Publishing History
Rita Felski, University of Virginia / Feminist Theory
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Copyright © 2002 The Johns Hopkins University Press.