In this Issue
- Volume 32, Number 4, 1989
- Issue
- George Gissing
Formerly ELT: English Fiction in Transition, through Volume 5, 1962 (Print ISSN: 0364-3549).
ELT publishes articles on fiction, poetry, drama, or subjects of cultural interest in the 1880–1920 period of British literature. Submissions are typically 20–25 double-spaced pages. While we publish reviews of books about Joseph Conrad, Henry James, James Joyce, D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, and W. B. Yeats, we do not publish articles on such major figures unless the discussion is linked to less-prominent authors of the era. We do not publish unsolicited book reviews.
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Volume 32, Number 4, 1989Table of Contents
Essays on Gissing
Book Reviews
- The Impressionist as Historian
- pp. 478-482
- British Autobiographers
- pp. 485-487
- Modernist Conjectures
- pp. 487-490
- Myth of the Modern
- pp. 490-494
- Tracking Stevenson
- pp. 494-496
- Buchan's Richard Hannay
- pp. 496-498
- The Short Story in the 90s
- pp. 501-504
- Of Modernism and Wells
- pp. 504-506
- Edward Thomas
- pp. 506-509
- Lady Gregory
- pp. 509-511
- Synge's Playboy
- pp. 511-515
- The Plumed Serpent
- pp. 518-520
- James's Indirect Vision
- pp. 520-524
- Gothic Manners
- pp. 524-526
- W. B. Yeats
- pp. 527-529
- Poets and Language
- pp. 529-532
Books Received
Drawings by Dug Weston
- Drawings by Dug Weston
- pp. 418-440
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Copyright © 1989 English Literature in Transition, 1880-1920.