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- Digital Price: $19.00 USD (All sales final)
- Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers
- University of Nebraska Press
- Article
- "How I Look": Fanny Fern and the Strategy of Pseudonymity Volume 27, Number 1, 2010, pp. 23-42
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 30 articles in total
- Editor's Note
- Two Men (review)
- Ramona (review)
- On the Divide: The Many Lives of Willa Cather (review)
- Modernism and Mildred Walker (review)
- African, Native, and Jewish American Literature and the Reshaping of Modernism (review)
- New Women Dramatists in America, 1890-1920 (review)
- The Cambridge Companion to Kate Chopin (review)
- "They Say": Ida B. Wells and the Reconstruction of Race (review)
- The Harriet Jacobs Family Papers (review)
- Emily Dickinson's Correspondences: A Born-Digital Textual Inquiry (review)
- Scare Tactics: Supernatural Fiction by American Women (review)
- Teaching Nineteenth-Century American Poetry (review)
- Freedom's Empire: Race and the Rise of the Novel in Atlantic Modernity, 1640–1940 (review)
- The Correspondence of Edith Wharton and Macmillan, 1901-1930, and: Edith Wharton and the Conversations of Literary Modernism (review)
- Seeing Red: Anger, Sentimentality, and American Indians, and: Moving Encounters: Sympathy and the Indian Question in Antebellum Literature (review)
- The Many Faces of Margaret Fuller
- Excerpt from A Woman Tenderfoot
- Grace Gallatin Thompson Seton (1872-1959)
- Excerpt from Guenn: A Wave on the Breton Coast
- Blanche Willis Howard (1847-1898)
- Hanging Out: A Research Methodology
- Death-Defying Testimony: Women's Private Lives and the Politics of Public Documents
- "Sojourners in the Archive": Reflections on the Art of Recovery Work
- "Other People's Clothes": Homosociality, Consumer Culture, and Affective Reading in Edith Wharton's Summer
- Linguistic Regionalism and the Emergence of Chinese American Literature in Sui Sin Far's "Mrs. Spring Fragrance"
- Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Trixy, and the Vivisection Question
- "What did you mean?": Marriage in E. D. E. N. Southworth's Novels
- "How I Look": Fanny Fern and the Strategy of Pseudonymity
- "Let no man know": Negotiating the Gendered Discourse of Affliction in Anne Bradstreet's "Here Followes Some Verses Upon the Burning of Our House, July 10th, 1666"
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