In this Issue
- Volume 39, Number 1, Winter 1999
- Issue
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SEL focuses on four fields of British literature in rotating, quarterly issues: English Renaissance, Tudor and Stuart Drama, Restoration and Eighteenth Century, and Nineteenth Century. The editors select learned, readable papers that contribute significantly to the understanding of British literature from 1500 to 1900. SEL is well known for the commissioned omnibus review of recent studies in the field that is included in each issue. In a single volume, readers might find an argument for attributing a previously unknown work to Shakespeare or de-attributing a famous work from Milton, a study of the connections between class and genre in the Restoration Theater, an interdisciplinary exploration of the art of the miniature and Fielding's novels, or a theoretical exposition of the "material sublime" in Romantic poetry written by women.
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Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 39, Number 1, Winter 1999Table of Contents
- Gabriel Harvey and the Practice of Method
- pp. 19-39
- DOI: 10.1353/sel.1999.0009
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- Carew's Response to Jonson and Donne
- pp. 89-109
- DOI: 10.1353/sel.1999.0007
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- The Crashavian Mother
- pp. 111-129
- DOI: 10.1353/sel.1999.0006
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- Milton, Marriage, and a Woman's Right to Divorce
- pp. 131-153
- DOI: 10.1353/sel.1999.0001
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- Edmund Waller's Sacred Poems
- pp. 155-169
- DOI: 10.1353/sel.1999.0004
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- Recent Studies in the English Renaissance
- pp. 171-206
- DOI: 10.1353/sel.1999.0010
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- Books Received
- pp. 207-216
- DOI: 10.1353/sel.1999.0002
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Copyright
Copyright © 1999 William Marsh Rice University.