In this Issue
Intertexts publishes articles that employ innovative approaches to explore relations between literary and other texts, be they literary, historical, theoretical, philosophical, or social. Hybrid methodologies combining elements from a range of disciplines are encouraged and methodological reflections and argumentation are valued, especially when combined with detailed textual analysis. The journal is particularly interested in the use of theoretical perspectives to analyze texts other than those to which they are generally applied, hoping to provide not only new understandings of familiar texts but also to use those texts to examine the virtues and limitations of contemporary literary theory.
published by
Texas Tech University Pressviewing issue
Volume 15, Number 1, Spring 2011Editorial Board
Editor
Jacob Blevins, McNeese State University
Book Review Editor
Jason Banta, Texas Tech University
Associate Editors
Laura J. Beard, Texas Tech University
David H. J. Larmour, Texas Tech University
Paul Allen Miller, University of South Carolina
Sharon Diane Nell, Loyola College, Baltimore, MD
Editorial Assistant
Daniel Hopkins, Texas Tech University
Editorial Board
Peter I. Barta, University of Surrey
Catherine Belsey, University of Wales, Swansea
Joel Black, University of Georgia
Patrick Brady, University of Tennessee
David F. Bright, Emory University
Sara Castro-Klarén, Johns Hopkins University
Bruce Clarke, Texas Tech University
Anne J. Cruz, University of Miami
David Konstan, Brown University
Paul Michael Lützeler, Washington University
Marjean Purinton, Texas Tech University
Geetha Ramanathan, West Chester University
Wayne A. Rebhorn, University of Texas
Carl A. Rubino, Hamilton College
Allan Stoekl, Penn State University