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- Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature
- The University of Tulsa
- Article
- Afterword: We Other Periodicalists, or, Why Periodical Studies? Volume 30, Number 2, Fall 2011, pp. 441-450
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $26.00 USD.
This issue contains 27 articles in total
- Contributors
- Books Received
- Chick Lit and Postfeminism by Stephanie Harzewski (review)
- Contemporary Women Writers Look Back: From Irony to Nostalgia by Alice Ridout (review)
- Modernist Short Fiction by Women: The Liminal in Katherine Mansfield, Dorothy Richardson, May Sinclair and Virginia Woolf by Claire Drewery (review)
- Women's Poetry and Popular Culture by Marsha Bryant (review)
- Stevie Smith and Authorship by William May (review)
- Radclyffe Hall: A Life in the Writing by Richard Dellamora (review)
- Women's Authorship and Editorship in Victorian Culture: Sensational Strategies by Beth Palmer (review)
- Jane Austen's Anglicanism by Laura Mooneyham White (review)
- Spiritual Mestizaje: Religion, Gender, Race, and Nation in Contemporary Chicana Narrative by Theresa Delgadillo (review)
- Unassimilable Feminisms: Reappraising Feminist, Womanist, and Mestiza Identity Politics by Laura Gillman (review)
- Writing the Black Revolutionary Diva: Women's Subjectivity and the Decolonizing Text by Kimberly Nichele Brown (review)
- Domesticity and Design in American Women's Lives and Literature: Stowe, Alcott, Cather, and Wharton Writing Home by Caroline Chamberlin Hellman (review)
- Women Writers of the American West, 1833-1927 by Nina Baym (review)
- Exaltadas: A Female Genealogy of Transcendentalism ed. by Phyllis Cole and Jana Argersinger (review)
- Afterword: We Other Periodicalists, or, Why Periodical Studies?
- Around 1910: Periodical Culture, Women's Writing, and Modernity
- The Mess and Muddle of Modernism: The Modernist Journals Project and Modern Periodical Studies
- From a Tarantula on a Banana Boat to a Canary in a Mine: Ms. Magazine as a Cautionary Tale in a Neoliberal Age
- A Chameleonic Character: Celebrity, Embodiment, and the Performed Self in Cornelia Otis Skinner's Magazine Monologues
- Tears on Trial in the 1920s: Female Emotion and Style in Chicago and Machinal
- Expanding Woolf's Gift Economy: Consumer Activity Meets Artistic Production in The Dial
- The Anatomy of Complicity: Rebecca Harding Davis, Peterson's Magazine, and the Civil War
- "The Character of Editress": Marian Evans at the Westminster Review, 1851-54
- "Connections, which are of service . . . in a more advanced age": The Lady's Magazine, Community, and Women's Literary Histories
- From the Editor: Women and Anglo-American Periodicals
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