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- Digital Price: $26.00 USD (All sales final)
- Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature
- The University of Tulsa
- issue
- Volume 34, Number 2, Fall 2015
- Books Received
- Sorrowtoothpaste Mirrorcream by Kim Hyesoon (review)
- The Sarashina Diary: A Woman’s Life in Eleventh-Century Japan by Sugawara no Takasue no Musume (review)
- Ananda Devi: Feminism, Narration, and Polyphony by Ritu Tyagi (review)
- Confronting Visuality in Multi-Ethnic Women’s Writing by Angela Laflen (review)
- The Radical Fiction of Ann Petry by Keith Clark (review)
- A Dark Rose: Love In Eudora Welty’s Stories and Novels by Sally Wolff (review)
- Edna Ferber’s America by Eliza McGraw (review)
- Panic Fiction: Women and Antebellum Economic Crisis by Mary Templin (review)
- Between the Novel and the News: The Emergence of American Women’s Writing by Sari Edelstein, and: Making Noise, Making News: Suffrage Print Culture and U. S. Modernism by Mary Chapman (review)
- Second Person Singular: Late Victorian Women Poets and the Bonds of Verse by Emily Harrington (review)
- The Romance of the Lyric in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Poetry: Experiments in Form by Lee Christine O’Brien (review)
- Fashion Victims: Dress at the Court of Louis Xvi and Marie-Antoinette by Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell (review)
- British Women Writers and the Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1785–1835: Re-Orienting Anglo-India by Kathryn S. Freeman (review)
- Sentimental Memorials: Women and the Novel in Literary History by Melissa Sodeman (review)
- Poetic Sisters: Early Eighteenth-Century Women Poets by Deborah Kennedy (review)
- Finding Bliss at McFarlin: The Papers of Eliot Bliss
- New Textual Discoveries and Recovered Passages in Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Herland
- Bulgarian Women Write the New European Subject: Emilia Dvorianova’s Zemnite Gradini na Bogoroditsa as a Response to Julia Kristeva’s Crisis of the European Subject
- “Phyllis McGinley needs no puff”: Gender and Value in Mid-Century American Poetry
- Articulating the (Dis)Enchantment of Colonial Modernity: Mei Niang’s Representation of the Predicament of Chinese New Women
- “for Karnak 1923 / from London 1942”: Approaching War in H. D.’s The Walls Do Not Fall
- Reading the Afterlife of Isabella di Morra’s Poetry
- “Shallow” Estates and the “Deep” Wild: The Landscapes of Charlotte Smith’s Fiction
- “Uncommon Sentiments”: Religious Freedom and the Marriage Plot in Charlotte Lennox’s Henrietta
- From the Editor: Remembering Shari Benstock
- In Memoriam
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