This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit Georgia State University's Website., Johnston, Carol Ann. "'The Treasure...
This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher, The American Poetry Review., Johnston, Carol Ann. "Theorizing Typography: Printing, Page Design, and the Study of Free Verse."...
Menon, Sheela Jane. "Time to Embrace, Not Shun, Malaysia’s Migrant Community: Malaysia Should Recognize our Shared Humanity and Welcome Neighbors in Need." The Diplomat (Article published online May 7, 2020)....
This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the permission of the publisher. For more information on the published version, visit Hawaii Review's Website., The Mississippi writer Eudora Welty began her...
Is there a demonstrable link between the literatures of the American Renaissance and the inception of literary modernism? Critical commonplaces describe the American scene as a theater of sweeping technological modernization...
William McIlvanney has written three mysteries which revolve around the Glaswegian police detective, Jack Laidlaw.1> In each McIlvanney uses his versions of the detective novel to celebrate the continuing richness and diversity...
For more information on the published version, visit Boston University Arts & Sciences Editorial Institute's Website. This article was published in the special issue: 'In Honor of Robert Langbaum'., Nichols, Ashton....
There she lay, unconscious that I was looking at her. ...I waited a moment, looking at her from behind her pillow, as she lay beneath me, with one arm and hand resting on the white coverlid, so still, so quietly breathing, that...
Phillips, Siobhan. "A Vocation." The Kenyon Review Online Summer 2011. http://www.kenyonreview.org/kr-online-issue/2011-summer/selections/a-vocation/ and This published version is made available on Dickinson Scholar with the...
For more information about the published version, visit Duke University Press's Website., No twentieth-century poet attended more to daily routine than did Wallace Stevens. From a 1927 letter that outlines his schedule...