For some time now it has been fashionable when reviewing any sort of anthology to focus critical lens on what the anthology leaves out. In both formal and informal reviews of literary anthologies and collections of essays what an editor does not include in his or her text often takes precedent over the relative virtues of the texts actually appearing in the anthology itself. In the most postmodern of moments, absence erases presence
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
This volume functions both in illuminating minority perspectives in print culture and describing and...
The original edition of The Ethnic American Woman was published in 1978 with 381 pages. For the 1989...
Women, Race, and Ethnicity had its origin in a series of reading lists prepared by the office of the...
Two publications important in the study of women\u27s literature appeared this spring -- The Norton ...
The collection by Ruoff and Ward stands within the canon discussion in American literary history, wh...
The editor of this text, Magdalene J. Zaborowska of Aarhus University, is a respected feminist speci...
In the notes to the reader in this two-volume Heath Anthology, Lauter emphasizes that a major princi...
This book begins to meet a significant need; ignorance of writings by women of color prevails throug...
Review of the book, The Cultural Politics of Slam Poetry: Race, Identity, and the Performance of Pop...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
Review of The Oxford Book of American Poetry: The Difficulty of Anthologizing American Poetr
For years editors of standard American literature anthologies have presented undergraduates with a n...
The House that Race Built is a fascinating account of race and racism upon the terrain of United Sta...
In his introduction to Confirmation, Amiri Baraka points out that the anthology is not intended, in...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
This volume functions both in illuminating minority perspectives in print culture and describing and...
The original edition of The Ethnic American Woman was published in 1978 with 381 pages. For the 1989...
Women, Race, and Ethnicity had its origin in a series of reading lists prepared by the office of the...
Two publications important in the study of women\u27s literature appeared this spring -- The Norton ...
The collection by Ruoff and Ward stands within the canon discussion in American literary history, wh...
The editor of this text, Magdalene J. Zaborowska of Aarhus University, is a respected feminist speci...
In the notes to the reader in this two-volume Heath Anthology, Lauter emphasizes that a major princi...
This book begins to meet a significant need; ignorance of writings by women of color prevails throug...
Review of the book, The Cultural Politics of Slam Poetry: Race, Identity, and the Performance of Pop...
Scholars doing research in ethnic literature have long been aware of the political nature of much of...
Review of The Oxford Book of American Poetry: The Difficulty of Anthologizing American Poetr
For years editors of standard American literature anthologies have presented undergraduates with a n...
The House that Race Built is a fascinating account of race and racism upon the terrain of United Sta...
In his introduction to Confirmation, Amiri Baraka points out that the anthology is not intended, in...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
This volume functions both in illuminating minority perspectives in print culture and describing and...
The original edition of The Ethnic American Woman was published in 1978 with 381 pages. For the 1989...