The scope and complexity of the encounter with Europe in Victorian poetry remains largely underap...
The black and white women travel writers whom Jennifer Bernhardt Steadman investigates in Traveli...
This book was published in June 1994 by a French publisher and became the winner of the Organizat...
From the twelfth century onwards, medieval English writers adapted the conventions of high litera...
What is nonsense? How has it permeated our day-to-day speech and thought processes in order to be...
In their debut picture book, Frederick Luis Aldama and Chris Escobar invite young readers along o...
Campaign consultants are arguably now as famous in the United States as the politicians themselve...
The era of national liberation and decolonization may have come and gone, but postcolonialism rem...
In his latest collection, Hummingbirds Between the Pages, prizewinning Irish essayist Chris Arthu...
The powerful essays in Paul Crenshaw's This One Will Hurt You range in subject matter from the fi...
The plague first arrived in the English port of Weymouth in the summer of 1348. Two years later, ...
In Against Exclusion, Audrey Wu Clark dramatically reframes Asian American resistance via the liv...