In this Issue
With a firm commitment to interdisciplinary exchange, Eighteenth-Century Life addresses all aspects of European and world culture during the long eighteenth century, 1660-1815. The most wide-ranging journal of eighteenth-century studies, it also encourages diverse methodologies--from close reading to cultural studies--and it is always open to suggestions for innovative approaches and special issues. Among Eighteenth-Century Life's noteworthy regular features are its film forums, its review essays, the longest and most eclectic lists of books received of any journal in the field, and its book-length special issues.
published by
Duke University Pressviewing issue
Volume 34, Number 3, Fall 2010Table of Contents
- Proving a Fake
- pp. 6-11
- The Legacy of Enlightenment
- pp. 17-22
- The Whig Interpretation of Poetry
- pp. 23-27
- The Secret Napoleonic Code
- pp. 28-31
- Complicity
- pp. 32-35
- Designing Piranesi
- pp. 36-40
- Romantic Forgery
- pp. 41-47
- Can Fiction “Do” Racism?
- pp. 48-50
- Rousseau and Feminist Revision
- pp. 51-54
- Sets, Lives, and Videotape
- pp. 63-75
- English Women Writing Politics
- pp. 81-87
- Narrating the Poor
- pp. 94-98
- Folk and Classic Intertwined
- pp. 99-104
- The Search for “It”
- pp. 114-123
- A Sartorial Road Map to Rebellion
- pp. 124-129