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

  • Notes on Contributors

Margaret D. Bauer is the Rives Chair of Southern Literature and Harriot College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor at East Carolina University, where she has edited the North Carolina Literary Review for almost a quarter-century. Her books include William Faulkner’s Legacy: “what shadow, what stain, what mark” and A Study of Scarletts: Scar-lett O’Hara and Her Literary Daughters.

William Dunlap is on the Editorial Advisory Board of The Southern Quarterly and is from Webster County, Mississippi. He is an artist and writer who divides his time between studios in Virginia, Florida, and Mississippi. His collection of stories, Short Mean Fiction, was published by Nautilus Press.

Robert Fowler is a Ph.D. candidate at The University of Southern Mississippi, specializing in early American literature.

Henry Hart has published four books of poetry, the most recent being Familiar Ghosts (Orchises). He has also published biographies of James Dickey and Robert Frost, as well as scholarly studies of Geoffrey Hill, Seamus Heaney, and Robert Lowell. Since 1986, he has taught in the English Department at The College of William and Mary.

Don Norris is an emeritus professor of biological sciences, The University of Southern Mississippi. As a landscape photographer, he has particular interests in historical Southern architecture. His work has been widely exhibited and is represented in permanent collections of museums of fine art across the South.

Jon-Michael Platt is an M.A. candidate in literature at The University of Southern Mississippi.

Jon Riccio is a Ph.D. candidate at The University of Southern Mississippi’s Center for Writers. He serves as a contributing interviewer for the University of Arizona Poetry Center’s 1508 blog, and as the poetry editor at Fairy Tale Review.

James H. Watkins is Associate Professor of English, Rhetoric, and Writing at Berry College. In addition to being the editor of Southern Selves: A Collection of Autobiographical Writing (Vintage 1998), his articles on Southern autobiography can be found in Mississippi Quarterly, Southern Quarterly, The North Carolina Literary Review, American Indian Culture and Research Journal, and elsewhere.

Jay Watson is Howry Professor of Faulkner Studies and Professor of English at the University of Mississippi, where he also directs the annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha conference. He is author or editor of twelve books, the most recent of which is a monograph, William Faulkner and the Faces of Modernity (Oxford UP, 2019).

Mary Jane White is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and has held NEA Fellowships in both poetry and translation. Her book Starry Sky to Starry Sky (1988), available from Holy Cow! Press, contains translations of Marina Tsvetaeva which first appeared as a long feature in The American Poetry Review. Recent Tsvetaeva translations include: New Year’s, an elegy for Rilke, a chapbook from Adastra Press (Massachusetts); “Poem of the Hill” in the Summer 2007 issue of The New England Review; “Poem of the End” in the Winter 2008 issue of The Hudson Review, reprinted in two anthologies, From a Terrace in Prague, (Prague 2011) and Poets Translate Poets, (Syracuse 2013). She has a new collection forthcoming from Adelaide Books (NYC/Lisbon) in 2020, After Russia, Poems of an Emigrant.

...

pdf

Share