In this Issue
Nineteenth-Century French Studies provides scholars and students with the opportunity to examine new trends, review promising research findings, and become better acquainted with professional developments in the field. Scholarly articles on all aspects of nineteenth-century French literature and criticism are published. Invited essays of nearly double the length of a traditional article and Incipit, a dialogic format in which two colleagues debate a matter of primary concern to the field, are also featured.
published by
University of Nebraska Pressviewing issue
Volume 39, Number 3 & 4, Spring-Summer 2011Editorial Board
Founding Editor
T.H. Goetz
Editor
Marshall C. Olds, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Review Editor
Timothy Raser, University of Georgia
Editorial Assistant
Leif Milliken
Advisory Board
David Baguley, University of Durham, United Kingdom
Janet Beizer, Harvard University
Scott Carpenter, Carleton College
Ross Chambers, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Barbara Cooper, University of New Hampshire, Durham
Mary Donaldson-Evans, University of Delaware
Graham Falconer, University of Toronto
Wendelin Guentner, University of Iowa
James F. Hamilton, University of Cincinnati
James Hiddleston, Oxford University
Doris Y. Kadish, University of Georgia
Dorothy Kelly, Boston University
Rosemary H. Lloyd, Indiana University
Stamos Metzidakis, Washington University in St. Louis
Emanuel J. Mickel, Jr., Indiana University
Steve Murphy, Université Rennes 2
Suzanne Nash, Princeton University
Jacques Neefs, Université de Paris viii & the Johns Hopkins University
Catherine Nesci, University of California, Santa Barbara
Allan H. Pasco, University of Kansas
Laurence Porter, Michigan State University
Julia Przyboś, Hunter College
Lawrence R. Schehr, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Gisèle Séginger, Université Paris-Est
Émile J. Talbot, University of Illinois
Robert Ziegler, Montana Tech, of the University of Montana
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Copyright © 2008 The University of Nebraska Press.