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- Digital Price: $19.00 USD (All sales final)
- Legacy
- University of Nebraska Press
- Article
- Sex, Love, Revenge, and Murder in "Away Down in Jamaica": A Lost Short Story by Sui Sin Far (Edith Eaton) Volume 21, Number 1, 2004, pp. 85-89
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $34.00 USD.
This issue contains 23 articles in total
- Editor's Note
- Legacy Index: Volumes 11-20, 1994-2003
- Legacy Bookshelf
- The Syntax of Class: Writing Inequality in Nineteenth-Century America (review)
- Fleshing Out America: Race, Gender, and the Politics of the Body in American Literature, 1833-1879 (review)
- She Left Nothing in Particular: The Autobiographical Legacy of Nineteenth-Century Women's Diaries (review)
- The Life and Writings of Betsey Chamberlain: Native American Mill Worker (review)
- A Historical Guide to Edith Wharton (review)
- Middlebrow Moderns: Popular American Women Writers of the 1920s (review)
- Onoto Watanna: The Story of Winnifred Eaton, and: The Literary Voices of Winnifred Eaton: Redefining Ethnicity and Authenticity (review)
- Imagining Rhetoric: Composing Women of the Early United States (review)
- Poets in the Public Sphere: The Emancipatory Project of American Women's Poetry, 1800-1900 (review)
- Lillie Devereux Blake: Retracing a Life Erased (review)
- Writing Out of Place: Regionalism, Women, and American Literary Culture (review)
- Away Down in Jamaica
- Sex, Love, Revenge, and Murder in "Away Down in Jamaica": A Lost Short Story by Sui Sin Far (Edith Eaton)
- Excerpt From Laura Curtis Bullard's Writings: From "The Field is the World," Chapter 20 of Christine: or, Woman's Trials and Triumphs (1856)
- Laura Jane Curtis Bullard (1831-1912)
- Gendered Vision(s) in the Short Fiction of Harriet Prescott Spofford
- Harriet Monroe's Pioneer Modernism: Nature, National Identity, and Poetry, A Magazine of Verse
- "Queer myself for good and all": The House of Mirth and the Fictions of Lily's Whiteness
- "A true woman's courage and hopefulness": Martha W. Tyler's A Book without a Title: or, Thrilling Events in the Life of Mira Dana (1855-56)
- Panic Fiction: Women's Responses to Antebellum Economic Crisis
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