In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

The Contributors RICHARD M. EASTMAN. Chairman of English at North Central College, Naperville, Dlinois. Professor Eastman has published articles on Beckett, Dostoyevsky, the theory of fiction, and the theory of drama. ALLAN BRICK. Professor Brick teaches English at Dartmouth College. He has published articles on nineteenth and twentieth century literature and is presently at work on a book about philosophic idealism in Victorian poetry and fiction. KENNETH S. WffiTE. Currently teaching French at the University of Michigan, Dr. White has recently contributed to Books Abroad, The French Review, and Renascence. At present he is working on a book on Lenormand and on studies of Marcel Ayme and Georges Neveux. HENRY KNEPLER. Professor Knepler, who teaches English at Dlinois Institute of Technology, is co-author of A Range of Writing and author of articles on the drama in journals in the United States and abroad. RIMA DRELL RECK. Dr. Reck teaches French at Tulane University. She has written articles on Fran!;oise, Mallet-Joris, Simone de Beauvoir, Malraux, and Camus. CALVIN EVANS. Mr. Evans is at present a member of the Department of Foreign Languages at Louisiana State University. He has contributed articles on the cinema and the theater to Shenandoah and Fresco. KESSEL SCHWARTZ. Professor Schwartz is Chairman of the Department of Romance Languages at the University of Arkansas. LEONARD C. PRONKO. Professor Pronko teaches French at Pomona College. He has published articles in Modem Language Forum and has translated essays by Ionesco and Achard for Theatre Arts. His book, The World of Jean Anouilh, has recently been published by the University of California Press. CARL W. WOOTON. An assistant in the Department of English at The University of Southwestern Louisiana, Mr. Wooton has contributed a critical study on modern poetry to Arizona Quarterly and poetry to The Ave Maria Magazine. CLAUDE HILL. Associate Professor of German at Rutgers University, Dr. Hill is a regular contributor to Saturday Review, Books Abroad, Universitas, and other periodicals. WALTER SOKEL. Author of The Writer in Extremis, recently published by Stanford University Press, and of numerous articles on Kafka, Musil, and the Expressionists, Dr. Sokel is Associate Professor of German Literature and Humanities at Columbia University. KADIDJA WEDEKIND-BIEL. Mrs. Wedekind-Biel has been giving a series of lectures in this country on her father's life and works. ...

pdf

Share