Travel through literary history with FREE access Routledge Literature Timeline Explore over 100 articles spanning six key periods in literary history from Medieval through to Contemporary and Postcolonial for FREE! Routledge Books Contemporary & Postcolonialism Modernism Romanticism 19th Century Renaissance Medieval Medieval HOME FREE access Shakespearean medievalism Wolfram R. Keller European Journal of English Studies Cædmon’s Hymn: Context and dating Dennis Cronan English Studies Proverbs and the wisdom of literature: The Proverbs of Alfred and Chaucer’s Tale of Melibee Christopher Cannon Textual Practice Menopausal life as imitation of art: Margery Kempe and the lack of sorority Colleen Donnelly Women’s Writing Alfred Bammesberger ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews Interpreting The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale in a contemporary note to Thynne’s 1532 Edition Medieval literature and postcolonial studies James Robinson Journal of Postcolonial Writing Inheriting the legacy: Dekker reading Chaucer Chi-fang Sophia Li English Studies Who advised Beowulf to challenge Grendel? Antonina Harbus ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews Writing love in the thirteenth Nouvelle Katherine Kong Romance Quarterly Back We love it when you like us! www.facebook.com/routledgeliterature www.twitter.com/routledge_lit Continue to next page HOME FREE access ‘What is this but stone?’ Priam’s statue in Marlowe’s Dido, Queen of Carthage Efterpi Mitsi Word & Image: A Journal of Verbal/ Visual Enquiry John Donne’s pulpit voice Byron Nelson Prose Studies: History, Theory, Criticism ‘Bodying Truth’: Mediation, prophecy, and sacrament in Milton’s early prose Joseph R. Teller Prose Studies: History, Theory, Criticism Spenser’s filthy matter Stephen Guy-bray The Explicator Back We love it when you like us! Renaissance ‘A woman’s reason’: Aphra Behn reads Lucretius Shakespeare’s perversion: A reading of Sonnet 20 Sophie Tomlinson Intellectual History Review Natasha Distiller Shakespeare Shakespeare’s miracle plays Presentism, snachronism and the case of Titus Andronicus Grace Tiffany English Studies Cary DiPietro & Hugh Grady Shakespeare ‘I’ll play Diana’: Christopher Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus and the ‘Actaeon Complex’ Christopher Wessman English Studies Insubstantial pageants: Women’s work and the (im)material culture of the early modern stage Natasha Korda Shakespeare “What town’s this boy?”: English civic politics, Virginia’s urban debate, and Aphra Behn’s The Widow Ranter Paul Musselwhite Atlantic Studies www.facebook.com/routledgeliterature www.twitter.com/routledge_lit Continue to next page HOME FREE access 19 Century th Mimics, counterfeits and ‘other’ bad copies: Forging the currency of class and colonialism in Great Expectations The ‘bricolage’ of travel writing: A Bakhtinian reading of nineteenthcentury women’s travel writings about Italy Lauren Watson Textual Practice Betty Hagglund Studies in Travel Writing The pleasure of your company in late-Victorian clubland Barbara J. Black Nineteenth-Century Contexts: An Interdisciplinary Journal Romantic disease discourse: Disability, immunity, and literature Fuson Wang Nineteenth-Century Contexts: An Interdisciplinary Journal Back We love it when you like us! Ghostly traces, occult clues Marilena Parlati European Journal of English Studies Victorian ‘anti-racism’ and feminism in Britain Beginnings, endings, births, deaths: Sterne, Dickens, and Bleak House Matthew Beaumont Textual Practice Caroline Bressey Women: A Cultural Review “I do not see how it can ever be ascertained”: Aphra Behn and Jane Austen Cinderella and her sisters in new woman writing and Ella Hepworth Dixon’s fiction Janet Todd Women’s Writing Galia Ofek Women’s Writing www.facebook.com/routledgeliterature www.twitter.com/routledge_lit Continue to next page HOME FREE access Romanticism “A feeling that I was not for that hour / Nor for that place”: Wordsworth’s modernity Remediating William Blake: Unbinding the network architectures of Blake’s Songs Christopher Bundock European Romantic Review Jon Saklofske European Romantic Review Coleridge’s transcendental imagination: The seascape beyond the senses in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Orphan, embroiderer, insect, Queen: The “Elegant and Ingenious” art of being Ellena in Radcliffe’s The Italian (1796) A.C. Swanepoel Journal of Literary Studies Ada Sharpe European Romantic Review Roads, rivers, railways and pedestrian rambles: The space and place of travel in William Wordsworth’s poems and J. M. W. Turner’s paintings The devaluing of life in Shelley’s Frankenstein Lars Lunsford The Explicator We love it when you like us! Michael Williams English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies “Breathing human passion”: Keats, Cornwall, Shelley and popular romanticism Richard Marggraf Turley European Romantic Review Blake’s awareness of ‘Blake in a Newtonian World’: William Blake, Isaac Newton, and writing on metal Jason Snart History of European Ideas Suzanne Stewart Nineteenth-Century Contexts: An Interdisciplinary Journal Back ‘…a sad jar of atoms’: Aspects of religious and political scepticism in Byron and some contemporaries www.facebook.com/routledgeliterature www.twitter.com/routledge_lit Continue to next page Modernism HOME FREE access Anticipations of the accident: Modernist fiction and systemic risk Paul Crosthwaite Textual Practice ‘Caliban casts out Ariel’: Ezra Pound’s Victorian barbarian Drama as metaphor in Ernest Hemingway’s Today is Friday Christopher Dick The Explicator Rex Butler Romance Quarterly Liebestod, romanticism, and poetry in The Glass Menagerie Robert Stark Textual Practice Robert J. Cardullo ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews “You must remember this”: Trauma and memory in Catch-22 and Slaughterhouse Five Sacrifice as political representation in Bertolt Brecht’s Lehrstücke Alberto Cacicedo Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction David Pan The Germanic Review: Literature, Culture, Theory Everything and nothing: On Jorge Luis Borges’s “Kafka and his Precursors” The writer’s diary as borderland: The public and private selves of Virginia Woolf, Katherine Mansfield and Louisa May Alcott Meg Jensen Life Writing Apostolic minds and the spinning kouse: Jane Ellen Harrison and Virginia Woolf’s discourse of alterity Sowon S. Park Women: A Cultural Review Digression, ethical work, and Salinger’s postmodern turn Steven Belletto Lit: Literature Interpretation Theory Back We love it when you like us! www.facebook.com/routledgeliterature www.twitter.com/routledge_lit Continue to next page HOME FREE access Contemporary & Postcolonialism ‘We are the dead … you are the dead’. An examination of sexuality as a weapon of revolt in Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four Blu Tirohl Journal of Gender Studies Orwell in context: Communities, myths, values Stuart Sillars English Studies “Dissatisfied, family-hating shrews”: Women readers and Sylvia Plath’s literary reception Janet Badia Lit: Literature Interpretation Theory Martin Amis writes postmodern man ‘No aesthetics outside my freedom’ Elie A. Edmondson Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction Patrick Williams Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies “On the beach of elsewhere”: Angela Carter’s moral pornography and the critique of gender archetypes Epic AIDS: Angels in America from stage to screen Gregory J Rubinson Women’s Studies: An inter-disciplinary journal Migrating from terror: The postcolonial novel after September 11 Margaret Scanlan Journal of Postcolonial Writing Monica B. Pearl Textual Practice History as project and source in Achebe’s Things Fall Apart Emad Mirmotahari Postcolonial Studies ‘The place one had been years ago’: Mapping the past in Michael Ondaatje’s Running in the Family Marta Bladek Life Writing Back We love it when you like us! www.facebook.com/routledgeliterature www.twitter.com/routledge_lit Continue to next page HOME Routledge Books Looking to deepen your knowledge of a particular literary period? Routledge publishes in-depth research and criticisms across all eras of literature. Below are a few of our most recent and forthcoming publications. New New for 2013 New Medievalisms Modernism and Literature Frantz Fanon Making the Past in the Present Tison Pugh, University of Central Florida, USA and Angela Jane Weisl, Seton Hall University, USA August 2012: 234x156: 192pp Hb: 978-0-415-61726-0: £70.00 Pb: 978-0-415-61727-7: £19.99 eBook: 978-0-203-10828-4 New for 2013 Global Literary Theory An Introduction and Reader Edited by Mia Carter and Alan Friedman, both at University of Texas at Austin, USA January 2013: 246x174: 608pp Hb: 978-0-415-58163-9: £85.00 Pb: 978-0-415-58164-6: £26.99 The Routledge Companion to World Literature Edited by Richard J. Lane, Vancouver Island University, Canada Edited by Theo D’haen, K.U. Leuven University, Belgium, David Damrosch, Harvard University, USA and Djelal Kadir, Pennsylvania State University, USA January 2013: 246x174: 968pp Hb: 978-0-415-78301-9: £120.00 Pb: 978-0-415-78302-6: £24.99 Series: Routledge Companions to Literature An Anthology 2011: 246x174: 544pp Hb: 978-0-415-57022-0: £135.00 eBook: 978-0-203-80649-4 Back Pramod Nayar, University of Hyderabad, India Series: Routledge Critical Thinkers November 2012: 198x129: 176pp Hb: 978-0-415-60296-9: £55.00 Pb: 978-0-415-60297-6: £12.99 eBook: 978-0-203-07318-6 New Temporalities Russell West-Pavlov, University of Pretoria, South Africa Series: New Critical Idiom September 2012: 198x129: 224pp Hb: 978-0-415-52073-7: £55.00 Pb: 978-0-415-52074-4: £12.99 eBook: 978-0-203-10687-7 Please browse our website at www.routledge.com/literature or email literature@routledge.com for a copy of our books catalogue.