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

Contributors CHARLES A. HALLETT; Associate Professor of English at Fordham University, has contributed articles to various jour­ nals including Studies in Philology, Philological Quarterly, an� Journal of English and Germanic Philology. He has· pub­ lished Middleton's Cynics and currently he is doing research on revenge tragedy motifs. NATALIE CROHN SCHMITT teaches in the Theatre Depart­ ment of the University of Illinois at Chicago Circle. Earlier studies of hers have been published in Comparative Drama, The British Journal ofAesthetics, and Educational Theatre Journal, and she has directed many plays. ENOCH BRATER is Associate Professor of English at the Uni­ versity of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Aside from publishing numerous articles on Samuel Beckett and on contemporary literature, he has contributed to The Nation and The New Republic; in 1977 he guest-edited the special Beckett num­ ber for the Journal of Modern Literature. JOHN D. COX, Assistant Professor of English at the University of Victoria, is the author of several articles on Shakespeare and on Renaissance drama. During the 1978-79 academic year, he will be an Andrew W. Mellon Faculty Fellow at Harvard University M. S., BARRANGER chairs the Department of Theatre and Speech at Tulane University. Her articles and reviews on Renaissance, and on modem drama have appeared in Edu­ cational·Theatre Journal, Quarterly Journal of Speech, The Explicator, Scandinavian Studies, Modern.Drama, and CLA Journal. She is President-Elect of the American Theatre Association. ...

pdf

Share