In this Issue
The Modern Language Review, an English-language quarterly journal appearing continuously since 1905, publishes articles and book reviews on modern and medieval European languages, literatures, and cultures around the globe where European languages are spoken. The journal welcomes scholarship that takes a global or comparative approach as well as articles that appeal to a broad cross-section of scholars working on areas including, but not limited to, literature, the visual and performing arts, sociolinguistics, cultural history, and translation studies. All contributions are in English. The General Editor is Lucy O’Meara. We encourage submissions from scholars at all stages, including postgraduate researchers.
published by
Modern Humanities Research Associationviewing issue
Volume 110, Part 2, April 2015Table of Contents
- Italian Crime FictionThe Importance of Place in Contemporary Italian Crime Fiction: A Bloody JourneyMethods of Murder: Beccarian Introspection and Lombrosian Vivisection in Italian Crime FictionThe Black Album: il noir tra cronaca e romanzo (review)
- pp. 569-572
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/mlr.2015.0546
- ABSTRACTS
- pp. 628-629
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/mlr.2015.0488