PLL: Papers on Language and Literature

PLL: Papers on Language and Literature PLL is a generalist journal of literary criticism and scholarship published quarterly at Southern Il Joost.
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PLL is a generalist journal of literary criticism and scholarship published quarterly at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. PLL publishes essays on all national literatures and historical periods, as well as book reviews, notes, and original materials such as notebooks, letters, and journals. PLL began publication in 1965; its founding editor was Nicholas T. Editor: Helena Gurfinkel

Managing Editor: Melanie Ethridge

PLL: Papers on Language and Literature is hiring a Managing Editor. Illinois friends, or friends who know someone in Ill...
12/02/2023

PLL: Papers on Language and Literature is hiring a Managing Editor. Illinois friends, or friends who know someone in Illinois, please apply or spread the word:

You can now apply online by clicking on the job title you are interested in and clicking on the "Apply" link! After viewing the Job Description, click the 'Apply' tab. If this is the first time you are applying using our online job application, you will need to create an account and select a Usernam...

09/01/2019

PLL is transitioning to Twitter. Our handle is . Please follow and spread the word. This page will be deactivated.

08/02/2019

The contents of the final issue of 2019 are ready:

Essays

Coercion and Conversion Using Christain Magnanimity
in Shakespeare’s The Tempest
Jeevan Gurung

“Worse than two fathers”: Steampunk Pygmalion and a
New Look at Double Standards and
the Language of Things in the Digital Realm
Andrew Cooper

The Mixed Chinese Images as the Oriental Other
and the Occidental Savior in John Steinbeck’s Novels
Junwa Tian

Book Reviews

Naomi Morgenstern’s Wild Child:
Intensive Parenting and Posthumanist Ethics
Britni Marie Williams

Alison A.Chapman’s The Legal Epic:
Paradise Lost and the Early Modern Law
Stephen M. Fallon

Language and Literature in the World:

"Academic Celebration of E. M. Forster in Ludwigsburg"
Anna Kwiatowska, Krzysztof Fordonski, and Heiko Zimmerman

07/03/2019

Happy Fourth to our US followers! Here are the updated contents of the upcoming Volume 55 Issue 3:

Special Issue:
Decolonial Aesthetics of World Literature
Kyle Wanberg, Guest Editor

Essays
KYLE WANBERG, Introduction, “Decolonial Aesthetics: Decentering Geographies and Literatures”

JAMES M. ROBERTSON, “Dispatches from the Appendix of Europe: Miroslav Krleža’s Abject Modernism”
ABSTRACT: Through a reading of the Croatian writer Miroslav Krleža’s 1932 novel Povratak Filipa Latinowicza (The Return of Philip Latinowicz), this article explores the distinct historical experience of modernity in Europe’s south east periphery. Focusing on Krleža’s use of the abject in the literary construction of the periphery, it pursues three interrelated arguments. First, it demonstrates that the paradigm of peripheral modernism offers productive new avenues of research in considering the Balkans as a cultural zone distinct from Europe. Second, it explores the rivalry of realist and modernist aesthetics on the Marxist left beyond the literary metropoles of Western Europe, North America, and the USSR. Finally, it accounts for the predominance of the abject in peripheral literatures more broadly and links this aesthetic effect to the disjuncture between the spatial unevenness of modern capitalism and a narrative of modernization that privileges the West as a teleological ideal.
CHIENYN CHI, “‘The Madness’ of What Wasn’t Known Then: Reading Orphan of Asia through the Lens of Memory”
ABSTRACT: Postcolonial studies primarily examines the relationship between European colonizing powers and their colonies, often ignoring the Japan-Taiwan relationship. This paper calls attention to this marginality and offers a reading of a text set in Taiwan written under Japanese colonialism. Orphan of Asia dramatizes the journey of a colonized subject in Taiwan and his ultimate descent into madness. This paper uses Pierre Nora’s and Nicola King’s memory theories as a framework to analyze how the novel represents colonial trauma, gender, and national and cultural memory constructions. This paper also challenges how previous readings of Orphan of Asia are predicated on a recovery of an “authentic past” and an unproblematic merging of the past and the present for national identity construction.
SABELO J. NDLOVU-GATSHENI, “Discourses of Decolonization/Decoloniality”
ABSTRACT: The continuing hegemony of imperial powers around the world and the reality of persistence of formal colonialism in the form of French “departments” of the Caribbean Islands and such territories as Puerto Rico make discourses of decolonization/decoloniality very necessary and ever urgent. Conceptually, this article sutures the Latin American and African discourses around decolonization and decoloniality together as it challenges the idea that the insurgence and resurgence of decolonization/decoloniality cascades solely from a Latin American knowledge formation known as “modernity/coloniality.” African thinkers such as Ngugi wa Thiong’o have been very active in the production of discourses of decolonization and decoloniality. Paradigmatically, the article places at the center of the discourses of decolonization/decoloniality three empires (physical, commercial, and cognitive/metaphysical) in an endeavor to effectively make sense of the challenges facing contemporary struggles against coloniality. At the same time, the article grapples with the complex convergences and divergences of decolonization/decoloniality and postcoloniality/postcolonialism as it pushes forward the “decolonial turn” as a foundation for pluriversality.
Book Reviews
CIARÁN FINLAYSON reviews Jazz as Critique: Adorno on Black Expression Revisited, by Fumi Okiji
THEODRA BANE reviews Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis, by Katherine McKittrick, ed.
HOSAM ABOUL-ELA, “In Memoriam: Samir Amin”

06/03/2019

We are always looking forward to receiving special-issue proposals:
Special-Issue Proposal Guidelines
Papers on Language and Literature is seeking proposals for special issues on subjects including but not limited to
Digital Humanities
Film
Literary Translation
Print Culture
PLL is a generalist publication that is committed to publishing work on a variety of literatures, languages, and chronological periods. We accept proposals year-round. We are a quarterly and expect to publish a special issue once a year, every year. The specific volume and issue will be determined later, depending on the editors’ schedule.
Prospective guest-editors should submit current CVs and researched proposals of approximately 500 words describing the argument and rationale behind the special issue. If the guest-editor(s) decide to solicit contributions prior to the submission of the proposal, abstracts of articles and biographies of authors should be included with the proposal.
Proposals and supporting materials should be sent to the Editor at [email protected] as Word or PDF attachments. The subject line of the email should read “Special Issue Proposal.”
If a proposal is accepted, the guest-editor(s) will be responsible for soliciting contributions, appointing outside reviewers, and establishing submission deadlines. PLL practices double blind peer-review.
Please note that our typical issue is 112 print pages. We strongly recommend that a special issue include 2 book reviews related to the topic, in addition to articles.
Our house style follows the 2008 MLA Style Manual.
We look forward to hearing from you.

05/02/2019

Traveling to conferences, workshops, exhibits, or performances this summer? Consider writing a review for our "Language and Literature in the World" series. 1000 words; flexible deadlines. Queries to [email protected]

04/02/2019

Coming up this Summer (55.3):

Special Issue:
The Anticolonial Aesthetics of World Literature
Kyle Wanberg (New York University), Guest Editor

Essays
KYLE WANBERG, Introduction, “Comparative Regionalism and Its Literary Representations”

JAMES M. ROBERTSON, “Dispatches from the Appendix of Europe: Miroslav Krleža’s Abject Modernism”
ABSTRACT: Through a reading of the Croatian writer Miroslav Krleža’s 1932 novel Povratak Filipa Latinowicza (The Return of Philip Latinowicz), this article explores the distinct historical experience of modernity in Europe’s south east periphery. Focusing on Krleža’s use of the abject in the literary construction of the periphery, it pursues three interrelated arguments. First, it demonstrates that the paradigm of peripheral modernism offers productive new avenues of research in considering the Balkans as a cultural zone distinct from Europe. Second, it explores the rivalry of realist and modernist aesthetics on the Marxist left beyond the literary metropoles of Western Europe, North America, and the USSR. Finally, it accounts for the predominance of the abject in peripheral literatures more broadly and links this aesthetic effect to the disjuncture between the spatial unevenness of modern capitalism and a narrative of modernization that privileges the West as a teleological ideal.
CHIENYN CHI, “‘The Madness’ of What Wasn’t Known Then: Reading Orphan of Asia through the Lens of Memory”
ABSTRACT: Postcolonial studies primarily examines the relationship between European colonizing powers and their colonies, often ignoring the Japan-Taiwan relationship. This paper calls attention to this marginality and offers a reading of a text set in Taiwan written under Japanese colonialism. Orphan of Asia dramatizes the journey of a colonized subject in Taiwan and his ultimate descent into madness. This paper uses Pierre Nora’s and Nicola King’s memory theories as a framework to analyze how the novel represents colonial trauma, gender, and national and cultural memory constructions. This paper also challenges how previous readings of Orphan of Asia are predicated on a recovery of an “authentic past” and an unproblematic merging of the past and the present for national identity construction.
CAROLE BOYCE-DAVIES, “Schizophrenic Seas and the Caribbean Trans-Nation”
ABSTRACT: “Schizophrenic seas,” as framed by Harris, captures the sometimes-frenetic nature of the Atlantic and identifies its Caribbean intersections as places of multiple currents and movements from hurricane trade winds to middle passage epistemologies and expresses, therefore, the motions of the oceans, as some would define them, and the ways that those movements and journeys have an impact on how the transnational is identified. Thus schizophrenic seas and the Caribbean trans-nation, are each constitutive of the other, a set of imagined trans-nationalities that pull “tidalectically.” They move in different directions but allow for a series of returns to unsettled boundaries, redefined sea-scapes, and land-scapes definitely given the nature of island instability and the effects of environmental turns, creating a Caribbean trans-nation that also in my reading redefines Caribbean space.
Book Reviews
CIARÁN FINLAYSON reviews Jazz as Critique: Adorno on Black Expression Revisited, by Fumi Okiji
THEODRA BANE reviews Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis, by Katherine McKittrick, ed.
HOSAM ABOUL-ELA, “In Memoriam: Samir Amin”

02/04/2019

Trauma studies and the medical humanities across the world and centuries, from Hawthorne to A. L. Kennedy, in 55.2 (Spring 2019):

Essays
ZHONGFENG HUANG, “From ‘Purified with Fire’ to ‘That Impression of Permanence’: Holgrave’s Conversion in The House of the Seven Gables”
ABSTRACT: In his major novels, Nathaniel Hawthorne is constantly concerned with the intimate and interactive relationship between social reform and historical consciousness. This paper investigates the three phases of Holgrave’s perspective of social reform and examines the inseparable relationship between Hawthorne’s reformist impulse and historical consciousness in The House of the Seven Gables, which illustrates the power of social reform for renewal and regeneration and the force of history (as embodied by ancestral sins). By focusing on Holgrave’s transformation from a radical reformer to a conservative, this paper argues that the inextricable relationship between Hawthorne’s concept of social reform and a strong sense of historical continuity is prominently displayed in The House of the Seven Gables. In other words, Hawthorne advocates for social reform that is not divorced from a sense of the past.
CATHERINE FORSA, “The American Woman’s Health: Stowe’s Writings about Headaches, Health, and Home”
ABSTRACT: Headache sufferer Marie St. Clare is one of the sickest characters in Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s oeuvre. While critics tend to view Marie’s headaches as feigned or imagined, the headaches have a physical nature linked in large part to her failures of domesticity. This essay examines how Stowe’s depiction of the headache in the novel and in a series of advice texts is consistent with a nineteenth-century discourse that casts the headache as a catchall symptom of poor housekeeping in all of its forms. This vision of the headache presents women with a great deal of agency in relation to health, home, and the public arena as the headache becomes intertwined with Stowe’s message about women’s capacity to act against slavery. Attending to Stowe’s representation of the headache emphasizes her message about the scope of women’s capacity to remedy a number of problems inside and outside of the home.
JESSICA ALIAGA-LAVRIJSEN, “‘To Love Beyond Breath, Beyond Reason’: A. L. Kennedy’s So I Am Glad”
ABSTRACT: A.L. Kennedy is another Scottish writer who has dealt with trauma in her writing. Her novel So I Am Glad (1995) focuses on the trauma of Jennifer Wilson, who had been sexually abused as a child by her parents—who died very soon, leaving her orphan. However, the novel shows that the character can re-establish her commitment to the world through the love and care she gives to an amnesiac stranger who knocks at her door, Martin, who claims to be the writer and duellist Savinien de Cyrano de Bergerac. Regardless of the paradoxical consequences of the fantastic encounter with such an extraordinary person, the fact is that this unusual and fantastic love-experience allows Jennifer to regain some hope, to overcome her own traumas and to re-establish a real connection with other individuals—a working-through in the ambiguous territory of fantasy that might be shared by readers too.
Book Reviews
DEANNA P. KORETSKY reviews Brown Romantics: Poetry and Nationalism in the Global Nineteenth Century by Manu Samriti Chander
ANNETTE M. MAGID reviews Oscar Wilde and Classical Antiquity by Kathleen Riley, Alastair J. L. Blanshard, and Iarla Manny, eds.

01/03/2019

Happy New Year from PLL! If you are at the MLA Convention in Chicago, please visit us tomorrow, January 4th, at the Chat with an Editor Event (10-11, Columbus EF, the Hyatt) or attend the Future of Scholarly Journals panel (12-1:15, Plaza Ballroom A, the Hyatt).

12/04/2018

Happy Holidays from PLL! At the upcoming MLA Convention in Chicago, the Editor of PLL will participate in a Chat with an Editor, sponsored by the Council of the Editors of Learned Journals. Meet us on Friday, January 4th, 10-11 a.m. in the Columbus EF room at the Hyatt.

11/05/2018

PLL is 55 in 2019! Our first issue of the new year is a special one indeed:

Special Issue
Archives, Authority, Aura:
Modernism’s Archival Turn
Naomi Milthorpe, Guest Editor

Essays

“What Was It?”: The Avant-texte and the “Grinding Feeling of Wretchedness” in Katherine Mansfield’s “The Fly”
Todd Martin

Close Reading an Archival Object: Reflections on a Postcard from Salvador Dalí to Stefan Zweig, Circa 1938
Emily Ridge

A Deeper, Wider POOL: Reading Close Up through the
Archives of Its Contributors
Chris Townsend

Book Reviews

Cheap Modernism: Expanding Markets,
Publishers’ Series and the Avant-Garde by Lise Jaillant
Eliza Murphy

New Directions in Book History by Claire Battershill,
Helen Southworth, Nicola Wilson, Elizabeth Willson Gordon, Alice Staveley, and Michael Widner
Michael Shallcross

10/04/2018

Will you be at the MLA Convention in Chicago, January 3-6, 2019? Stop by to listen to the PLL editor reflect on the future of publishing and introduce yourself after the panel.

273. The Future of Scholarly Journals
Friday, 4 January 12:00 PM-1:15 PM, Plaza Ballroom A (Hyatt Regency)
AV Equipment: No equipment needed
Keywords: journal, publishing, scholarship , future
Sponsoring Entity: Council of Editors of Learned Journals

Panelists, some of whom edit general scholarly journals and others who edit niche ones, discuss the challenges and possibilities facing scholarly literature journals in our time. While sometimes this horizon differs, several issues remain in common. It is important for other editors to weigh in on their responses to our common situation and to allow others to appreciate the constraints editors encounter.

Speakers
Nancy Armstrong (Duke U)
Helena Gurfinkel (Southern Illinois U, Edwardsville)
Sandra M. Gustafson (U of Notre Dame)
W. J. T. Mitchell (U of Chicago)

09/06/2018

The TOC of the forthcoming Issue 4 of 2018 is ready:

Essays

Letting In the Right Let the Right One In: Sympathy for the Making of Fictional Sympathy
Michael Jay Lewis

“Self-preservation”: Identity, Idealism, and Pragmatism in Charles W. Chesnutt’s “The Wife of His Youth”
Joe Sarnowski

The Crisis of Interpretation in an Allegorical Reading of Iris Murdoch’s “The Unicorn”
Soheila Farhani Nejad

Book Reviews

Vincent P. Pecora’s Secularization without End: Beckett, Mann, Coetzee
Erik Tonning

Robert Lance Snyder's John le Carré's Post-Cold War Fiction
Jeffrey Covington

08/09/2018

A special issue on "Fictions of Circulation," guest-edited by Gretchen Busl, of Texas Woman's University, is coming in 2019. It develops new theories of world literatures and features articles on Mariama Ba, Antonin Artaud, Caryl Phillips, J.M. Coetzee, and O/others.

06/11/2018

Off to conferences, exhibits, or workshops this summer? Write a report for our "Language and Literature in the World" series. Length: 1000-1500 words; flexible deadlines. Queries at [email protected]

05/10/2018

The exciting contents of Issue 3 Volume 54, Summer 2018:

Essays
JAMES DUBAN, “Narrative Self-Absolution and Political Tyranny in Moby-Dick and Darkness at Noon”

ABSTRACT: What is the pertinence of Moby-Dick (1850) for the narrative technique, political concerns, and lingering guilt of reformed Communist Party member Arthur Koestler (1905-1983)? Specifically, how does Melville’s novel figure in Koestler’s Darkness at Noon (1940) and in Koestler’s several autobiographies? In response to such questions, the current study explores Ishmael’s propensity to compensate, via enhanced narrative ease and playfulness, for his having earlier surrendered his judgment and independence to Ahab’s totalitarianism. I also align Rubashov and Ahab, and in such manner as is compatible with Cold War readings of Moby-Dick popularized by C.L.R. James and others. What emerges is less Koestler’s “accurate” sense of Melville’s novel and narrator than Koestler’s possible encounter with an unreliable narrative outlook he appears not entirely to apprehend in his various moments of self-identification, moral castigation, and ethical absolution.

SLAWOMIR KOZIOL, ''From Sausages to Hoplites of Ham and Beyond: The Status of Genetically Modified Pigs in Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam Trilogy”

ABSTRACT: One of the main themes of Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy is the issue of genetic engineering. Among other problems connected with the technology, Atwood explores ways in which the use of human genes might influence human perception of modified animals. Drawing on a number of disciplines, the paper first discusses the changing relationship between humans and the pigoons—genetically engineered pigs with human-level intelligence—which culminates in making of a Hobbesian social contract between the two groups. The paper then focuses on the deceptively happy ending of the trilogy which shows continuing peaceful coexistence of the pigoons and humans. Arguing that the problem of the pigoons should be seen in the light of both animal and racial/colonial studies, the paper refers to philosophical, historical and fictional sources to contend that their continuing peaceful relationship with humans would be highly improbable at the time of a complete collapse of human civilization.

MICHAEL JAY LEWIS, “Letting In the Right Let the Right One In: Sympathy for the Making of Fictional Sympathy”

ABSTRACT: Recent studies have discussed the relation between literature and sympathy. Like their predecessors, several of these studies focus on the sympathy readers feel for characters, or, depicted figures. Certainly, most of these studies do more: they often also discuss sympathetic acts, scenes, as well as the resultant sympathy the reader has to an authorial or textual worldview. In doing so, however, they often downplay what might be narrative fiction’s most unique sympathetic experience: the one the reader has with the inferred act of constructing sympathetic depictions. Through John Ajvide Lindqvist’s Let the Right One In (Låt den rätte komma in), the paper analyzes how one’s encounter with a fictional narrative encourages one to sympathize not with the image of another—whether that be character, context, or view—but with the act of depicting or representing others sympathetically.
Book Reviews

TISHA BROOKS reviews Spirit in the Dark: A Religious History of Racial Aesthetics by Josef Sorett

KENDRA R. PARKER reviews The Things That Fly in the Night: Female Vampires in Literature of the Circum-Caribbean and African Diaspora by Giselle Liza Anatol

In London between now and June 16? Consider Reviewing this exhibit for our "Language and Literature in the World" series...
04/13/2018

In London between now and June 16? Consider Reviewing this exhibit for our "Language and Literature in the World" series. Reply in comments or email [email protected], if interested.

http://www.senatehouselibrary.ac.uk/exhibitions-and-events/exhibitions/q***r-between-covers

'Q***r Between the Covers' examines the diverse ways in which literature has been central to the culture’s handling and understanding of what q***rness might mean. Whether q***r sexualities are being celebrated, pitied, mocked, or denounced, books have not only been the preeminent means of debate,...

03/13/2018

We are always looking forward to receiving special-issue proposals:

Special-Issue Proposal Guidelines
Papers on Language and Literature is seeking proposals for special issues on subjects including but not limited to
Digital Humanities
Film
Literary Translation
Print Culture
PLL is a generalist publication that is committed to publishing work on a variety of literatures, languages, and chronological periods. We accept proposals year-round. We are a quarterly and expect to publish a special issue once a year, every year. The specific volume and issue will be determined later, depending on the editors’ schedule.
Prospective guest-editors should submit current CVs and researched proposals of approximately 500 words describing the argument and rationale behind the special issue. If the guest-editor(s) decide to solicit contributions prior to the submission of the proposal, abstracts of articles and biographies of authors should be included with the proposal.
Proposals and supporting materials should be sent to the Editor at [email protected] as Word or PDF attachments. The subject line of the email should read “Special Issue Proposal.”
If a proposal is accepted, the guest-editor(s) will be responsible for soliciting contributions, appointing outside reviewers, and establishing submission deadlines. PLL practices double blind peer-review.
Please note that our typical issue is 112 print pages. We strongly recommend that a special issue include 2 book reviews related to the topic, in addition to articles.
Our house style follows the 2008 MLA Style Manual.
We look forward to hearing from you.

02/13/2018

The exciting contents of the second issue of 2018:

The Angel in the Dump: “Liquid” Modern Waste in
Don DeLillo's “The Angel Esmeralda”
Rasa Rezania and Hossein Pirnajmuddin

“Arabesques of the Final Pattern”:
Len Deighton’s Hard-Boiled Espionage Fiction
Robert Lance Snyder

Robert Lowell’s Onionskin Aesthetic
Grzegorz Kosc

Reviews
Drawing the Line: Comics Studies and INKS, 1994-1997,
ed. Lucy Shelton Caswell and Jared Gardner
Geoff Schmidt

The Legacy of the Grand Tour: New Essays on Travel,
Literature, and Culture, ed. Lisa Colletta
Rebecca Nesvet

01/11/2018

Happy 2018 from PLL! In 2017, Tracy Hayes organized and reviewed for PLL a Thomas Hardy Study Day. It is coming up again on 7 April 2018. Consider submitting proposals! Details below.
A PAIR OF BLUE EYES
A Thomas Hardy Society Study Day
In association with the University of Exeter and the University of Hull
Saturday, 7th April 10.00am
The Corn Exchange, Dorchester
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Jane Thomas (University of Hull)
Andrew and Marilyn Leah (The Thomas Hardy Society)
Rebecca Welshman (University of Liverpool)
Angelique Richardson (University of Exeter) and Helen Angear (University of Exeter and DCM)
2018 will mark the 145th anniversary of the publication of A Pair of Blue Eyes, said to be the favourite Hardy novel of both Leslie Stephen and Coventry Patmore. A review in The Spectator in June 1873 described the novel as '...a really powerful story...of varied and deep interest...not too harrowing...relieved by exquisite touches of word-pictures...'. It is a tale of class and gender clashes, contains the scene which gave literature the term 'cliffhanger', and rather than Wessex, it is set in Cornwall where Hardy met his future wife Emma Gifford.
The Thomas Hardy Society warmly invites proposals for twenty-minute presentations on any aspect of A Pair of Blue Eyes which may include, but are not limited to:
Subversion of gender conventions
Homoeroticism and the Homosocial
Sexual expression and repression
The interdisciplinarity of science and literature
Biographical details within fiction
Moral purity/impurity
Secrecy and concealment
Spying and voyeurism
A day designed to appeal to both academics and general readers alike, the Society is also offering two bursaries of £50 each to students wishing to attend who would otherwise find travel or accommodation costs prohibitive. Please send proposals of no more than 350 words, and no later than 14 February 2018, along with a brief description, if you are a student, of how a bursary would benefit your studies, to Dr Tracy Hayes (THS Student Co-Ordinator) at [email protected]

Happy holidays from PLL! We are looking forward to ringing in 2018 with a first ever languages-of-film special issue. Pl...
12/11/2017

Happy holidays from PLL! We are looking forward to ringing in 2018 with a first ever languages-of-film special issue. Please see the full abstracts for 54.1 below:

http://www.siue.edu/pll/forthcoming_essays.shtml

Forthcoming Essays

10/17/2017

PLL is thrilled to announce the first visual-languages special issue in its history! "The Visual Language of Family and Gender in the Western," ably co-edited by Matthew Carter (Manchester Metropolitan University) and Marek Paryz (The University of Warsaw) is due out in early 2018. The TOC is below:

Contents

Matthew Carter and Marek Paryz
Introduction

Articles

Jordan Savage
“There Was a Veil upon You, Pocahontas”: The Pocahontas Story as a Myth of American Heterogeneity in the Liberal Western

Matthew Carter
“I’ve Been Looking for You”: Reconfiguring Race, Gender, and the Family through the Female Agency of The Keeping Room

Marek Paryz
Urban Milieu, Domesticity, and Fatherhood in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford

John White
Defending Home, Defending Homeland, Post 9/11: Jane Got a Gun

Lee Clark Mitchell
Hidden in Plain View: Family, the Western, and the Syntax of Genre in A History of Violence

Reviews

Victoria Lamont. Westerns: A Women’s History (Neil Campbell)

Emma Hamilton. Masculinities in American Western Films: A Hyper-Linear History (Martin Holtz)

09/19/2017

PLL is taking a firm stand against article-submission fees imposed on authors. We recently received an invitation to use software that asks authors for a $10 submission fee; we have also read mentions of similar situations on academic social media. Our contributors submit free-of-charge, no exceptions!

08/21/2017
08/21/2017

Welcome back to school! Here are the contents of the last issue of 2017:
Francisco Collado-Rodríguez, “The Holy Fool’s Revelation: Metafiction, Trauma, and Posthumanity in E. L. Doctorow’s Andrew’s Brain”

Mark Osteen, “Hideous Progeny: Forgery, Frankenstein, and Peter Carey’s My Life as a Fake”


Stephen Dougherty, “Vagabonds, The Death Ship, and Denationalization”


Book Reviews
Margaret Stetz, “Oscar Wilde Among the Women”
Elizabeth J. Cali, “Wake Work: ‘A Long History and Present’”

07/17/2017

Our condolences to the family, friends, students, and colleagues of Prof. Lawrence Besserman (Emeritus, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem), a prominent medievalist and PLL board member and contributor.

07/10/2017

Papers on Language and Literature is seeking proposals for special issues on subjects including but not limited to
Digital Humanities
Film
Literary Translation
Print Culture
PLL is a generalist publication that is committed to publishing work on a variety of literatures, languages, and chronological periods. We accept proposals year-round. We are a quarterly and expect to publish a special issue once a year, every year. The specific volume and issue will be determined later, depending on the editors’ schedule.
Prospective guest-editors should submit current CVs and researched proposals of approximately 500 words describing the argument and rationale behind the special issue. If the guest-editor(s) decide to solicit contributions prior to the submission of the proposal, abstracts of articles and biographies of authors should be included with the proposal.
Proposals and supporting materials should be sent to the Editor at [email protected] as Word or PDF attachments. The subject line of the email should read “Special Issue Proposal.”
If a proposal is accepted, the guest-editor(s) will be responsible for soliciting contributions, appointing outside reviewers, and establishing submission deadlines. PLL practices double blind peer-review.
Please note that our typical issue is 112 print pages. We strongly recommend that a special issue include 2 book reviews related to the topic, in addition to articles.
Our house style follows the 2008 MLA Style Manual.
We look forward to hearing from you.

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62026

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