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This issue contains 25 articles in total

[ + ] Show Issue Contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Editor’s Note
  3. Writing through Jane Crow: Race and Gender Politics in African American Literature by Ayesha K. Hardison (review)
  4. Making Noise, Making News: Suffrage Print Culture and U.S. Modernism by Mary Chapman (review)
  5. Sacramental Shopping: Louisa May Alcott, Edith Wharton, and the Spirit of Modern Consumerism by Sarah Way Sherman (review)
  6. Southern Women Novelists and the Civil War: Trauma and Collective Memory in the American Literary Tradition since 1861 by Sharon Talley (review)
  7. Over the River and through the Wood: An Anthology of Nineteenth-Century American Children’s Poetry ed. by Karen L. Kilcup, Angela Sorby (review)
  8. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps: Selected Tales, Essays, and Poems ed. by Elizabeth Duquette, Cheryl Tevlin (review)
  9. Panic Fiction: Women and Antebellum Economic Crisis by Mary Templin (review)
  10. Nineteenth-Century American Women Write Religion: Lived Theologies and Literature ed. by Mary McCartin Wearn (review)
  11. Cherokee Sister: The Collected Writings of Catharine Brown, 1818–1823 ed. by Theresa Strouth Gaul (review)
  12. One Colonial Woman’s World: The Life and Writings of Mehetabel Chandler Coit by Michelle Marchetti Coughlin (review)
  13. The New Woman
  14. Barbara E. Pope (1854–1908)
  15. Jessie Fauset’s Not-So-New Negro Womanhood: The Harlem Renaissance, the Long Nineteenth Century, and Legacies of Feminine Representation
  16. Entomology, Fiction, Intoxication: Annie Trumbull Slosson’s Narratives of Obsession
  17. Being In and Not Among: The Anti-Imperial Impulses of Helen Hunt Jackson’s Bits of Travel at Home
  18. “Outré-mer adventures”: Caroline Kirkland’s A New Home, Who’ll Follow? and the Maritime World
  19. Family History as Personal Narrative: Writing Black Gotham
  20. Martha Ballard’s Republic and Our Haunted Histories
  21. Historical Scholarship and the “Personal Guise”
  22. Negotiating the Personal and the Academic
  23. Feminism, Theology, and the Personal in American Studies
  24. Looking at a Candid Photograph of Myself
  25. Personal History: Martha Ballard, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, and the Scholarly Guise in Early American Women’s Studies
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