In this paper I investigate the matrix of transatlantic literary exchange in Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita (1955) in order to suggest how the novel’s rehabilitation of an international decadent aesthetics constitutes a radical challenge to the American literary establishment in the postwar. I begin by identifying the figures of Edgar Allen Poe, Charles Baudelaire and Algernon Swinburne as the key constellation for Nabokov in his plotting of Lolita’s ambivalent engagement with the ethics of temporality and artistic autonomy. I then go on to situate Lolita’s composition within debates current in the American academy from the late 1930s to the early 1950s over the value of decadent aesthetics within the modernist project and anxieties over Poe’s p...
This book review looks at 'How brands grow: part 2' by Jenni Romaniuk and Byron Sharp, the 2015 foll...
“And you may ask yourself, well – how did I get here?” (Talking Heads – ‘Once in a Lifetime’). Ma...
The study of law and emotion is now established as a distinct field of study in its own right. In th...
This article takes a thematic approach to analyse aspects of the sculpture of Alfred Drury (1856–194...
Children's author and publishing entrepreneur Constancio C. Vigil was a Uruguayan who spent most of ...
In this essay I argue that Capgrave engages not only with Chaucer, but with classical texts - notabl...
This extensive (5700 word) review of Despret's recent book places it in the context of her earlier w...
This article suggests that institutional workshops of assay were significant experimental sites in e...
Record numbers of international visitors to Cuba in recent years amidst dramatic political and econo...
Max Weber (who was writing at the turn of the 19th/20th centuries), argued that far from being the p...
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (‘CRC’) is the most ratified treaty in the ...
Drawing on and developing Kingdon’s multiple streams analysis, this article examines the development...
In A Biblical Text and Its Afterlives, published seventeen years ago (unbelievably), I looked forwar...
This article reconsiders the gift within London's sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century livery co...
This paper responds to the stream’s call to critically examine the bounds of truth, taking the relat...
This book review looks at 'How brands grow: part 2' by Jenni Romaniuk and Byron Sharp, the 2015 foll...
“And you may ask yourself, well – how did I get here?” (Talking Heads – ‘Once in a Lifetime’). Ma...
The study of law and emotion is now established as a distinct field of study in its own right. In th...
This article takes a thematic approach to analyse aspects of the sculpture of Alfred Drury (1856–194...
Children's author and publishing entrepreneur Constancio C. Vigil was a Uruguayan who spent most of ...
In this essay I argue that Capgrave engages not only with Chaucer, but with classical texts - notabl...
This extensive (5700 word) review of Despret's recent book places it in the context of her earlier w...
This article suggests that institutional workshops of assay were significant experimental sites in e...
Record numbers of international visitors to Cuba in recent years amidst dramatic political and econo...
Max Weber (who was writing at the turn of the 19th/20th centuries), argued that far from being the p...
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (‘CRC’) is the most ratified treaty in the ...
Drawing on and developing Kingdon’s multiple streams analysis, this article examines the development...
In A Biblical Text and Its Afterlives, published seventeen years ago (unbelievably), I looked forwar...
This article reconsiders the gift within London's sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century livery co...
This paper responds to the stream’s call to critically examine the bounds of truth, taking the relat...
This book review looks at 'How brands grow: part 2' by Jenni Romaniuk and Byron Sharp, the 2015 foll...
“And you may ask yourself, well – how did I get here?” (Talking Heads – ‘Once in a Lifetime’). Ma...
The study of law and emotion is now established as a distinct field of study in its own right. In th...