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- Digital Price: $26.00 USD (All sales final)
- Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature
- The University of Tulsa
- issue
- Volume 31, Numbers 1/2, Spring/Fall 2012
- Contributors
- Books Received
- Visitation by Jenny Erpenbeck (review)
- Arab-American Women’s Writing and Performance: Orientalism, Race and the Idea of “The Arabian Nights” by Somaya Sami Sabry (review)
- Water and African American Memory: An Ecocritical Perspective by Anissa Janine Wardi (review)
- The Nation Writ Small: African Fictions and Feminisms, 1958-1988 by Susan Z. Andrade (review)
- Vigilante Women in Contemporary American Fiction by Alison Graham-Bertolini (review)
- Beyond the Pulpit: Women’s Rhetorical Roles in the Antebellum Religious Press by Lisa J. Shaver (review)
- Time, Space, and Gender in the Nineteenth-Century British Diary by Rebecca Steinitz (review)
- Translation, Authorship and the Victorian Professional Woman: Charlotte Brontë, Harriet Martineau and George Eliot by Lesa Scholl (review)
- Feminism and the Politics of Travel after the Enlightenment by Yaël Schlick (review)
- Sister Arts: The Erotics of Lesbian Landscapes by Lisa L. Moore (review)
- The Family, Marriage, And Radicalism In British Women’s Novels Of The 1790s: Public Affection And Private Affliction by Jennifer Golightly (review)
- Eighteenth-Century Women Writers And The Gentleman’s Liberation Movement: Independence, War, Masculinity, And The Novel, 1778-1818 by Megan A. Woodworth (review)
- The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir (review)
- Women in Early America: Recharting Hemispheric and Atlantic Desire, special issue of Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers ed. by Tamara Harvey (review)
- Afterword: English, Women, Writing, Catholicism
- Using Digital Resources for the Study of English Catholic Women Writers
- Jane Barker’s Catholic Poems: An Edition of “Poems Refering to the Times” From the Magdalen Manuscript, Part One
- “Penance and mortification for ever”: Jane Austen and the Ambient Noise of Catholicism
- Regina Maria Roche’s The Children of the Abbey: Contesting the Catholic Presence in Female Gothic Fiction
- “All the World have heard of the Devil and the Pope”: Elizabeth Inchbald’s The Mogul Tale and English Catholic Satire
- “A distribution of tyme”: Reading and Writing Practices in the English Convents in Exile
- Of Her Making: The Cultural Practice of Mary, 9th Duchess of Norfolk
- Catharine Trotter and the Claims of Conscience
- Neither Single nor Alone: Elizabeth Cellier, Catholic Community, and Transformations of Catholic Women’s Piety
- Eighteenth-Century Women and English Catholicism
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