RaVoN #56 (November 2009):
Articles:
- Julie Murray (Carleton University): ‘At the Surface of Romantic Interiority: Joanna Baillie’s Orra‘
- Laurie Langbauer (The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill): ‘Marjory Fleming and Child Authors: The Total Depravity of Inanimate Things‘
- Eric Lindstrom (University of Vermont): ‘What Wordsworth Planted‘
- Jennifer Sarha (University of Lincoln): ‘‘The Sultan’s self shan’t carry me’: Negotiations of harem fantasies in Byron’s Don Juan‘
- Heidi Scott (Florida International University): ‘Apocalypse Narrative, Chaotic System: Gilbert White’s Natural History of Selborne and Modern Ecology‘
- Céline Sabiron (Sorbonne Paris-IV): ‘Crossing and Transgressing Borders in The Heart of Midlothian‘
- David Buchanan (University of Alberta): ‘Scott Squashed: Chapbook Versions of The Heart of Mid-Lothian‘
- Heidi J. Snow (Principia College): ‘William Wordsworth’s Definition of Poverty‘
- Julianne Buchsbaum (University of Kansas): ‘Abjection and the Melancholic Imagination: Towards a Poststructuralist Psychoanalytic Reading of Blake’s The Book of Urizen‘
- Allison Dushane (University of Arizona): ‘“Mere Matter:” Causality, Subjectivity and Aesthetic Form in Erasmus Darwin‘
Review-Essay:
- Maureen N. McLane (New York University): ‘British Romanticism Unbound: Reading William St Clair’s The Reading Nation – A Review-Essay‘
RaVoN #55 (August 2009):
“Victorian Studies and its Publics” – Guest-edited by Linda K. Hughes
- Linda K. Hughes (Texas Christian University, Fort Worth): ‘Introduction‘
Articles:
- Russell M. Wyland (National Endowment for the Humanities): ‘Public Funding and the “Untamed Wilderness” of Victorian Studies‘
- Laurel Brake (Birkbeck, University of London): ‘Tacking: Nineteenth-Century Print Culture and its Readers‘
- Anne Helmreich (Case Western Reserve University): ‘Victorian Exhibition Culture: The Market Then and the Museum Today‘
- Margaret Stetz (University of Delaware): ‘“Would You Like Some Victorian Dressing with That?”‘
- Miriam Bailin (Washington University): ‘A Community of Interest—Victorian Scholars and Literary Societies‘
- Regenia Gagnier (University of Exeter): ‘Victorian Studies’ International Publics: The California Dickens and Global Circulation Projects‘
- Teresa Mangum (University of Iowa): ‘The Many Lives of Victorian Fiction‘
- Carol Christ (Smith College): ‘Victorian Studies and its Publics
RaVoN #54 (May 2009):
Articles:
- Ian Haywood (Roehampton University, London): ‘The Spectropolitics of Romantic Infidelism: Cruikshank, Paine, and The Age of Reason‘
- Nicholas Frankel (Virginia Commonwealth University): ‘The Designer’s Eye: Ancient Spanish Ballads, Poetry, and the Rise of Decorative Design‘
- Harriet Kramer Linkin (New Mexico State University): ‘Lucy Hooper, William Blake, and “The Fairy’s Funeral”‘
- Shelley Trower (University of Exeter): ‘Nerves, Vibration and the Aeolian Harp‘
- Andrew Burkett (Wake Forest University): ‘Wordsworthian Chance‘
- Marcus Tomalin (Downing College, University of Cambridge): ‘William Rowan Hamilton and the Poetry of Science‘
- Chris Jones and Li-Po Lee (University of Bangor and Chia-Nan University): ‘Wordsworth’s Creation of Active Taste‘
Review-Essays:
- Laurie Langbauer (The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill): ‘Consumerism and the Archive: On Krista Lysack’s Come Buy, Come Buy: Shopping and the Culture of Consumption in Victorian Women’s Writing, and Brent Shannon’sThe Cut of His Coat: Men, Dress, and Consumer Culture in Britain, 1860-1914‘
- Bruce Robbins (Columbia University): ‘Mary Poovey’s Anxiety: Mary Poovey’s Genres of the Credit Economy: Mediating Value in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Britain‘