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SHAKSPER 1999: Q/W/E/R/T/Y 9 (Oct. 1999)
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@ws.bowiestate.edu) Date: 10/15/99
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 10.1752 Friday, 15 October 1999.
From: Bertrand Rouge´ <bertrand.rouge@univ-pau.fr>
Date: Thursday, 14 Oct 1999 22:54:04 +0100
Subject: Q/W/E/R/T/Y 9 (Oct. 1999)
Articles on SHAKESPEARE, The SPECTATOR, DICKENS, CATHER, CARVER, HUGHES,
ISHIGURO, WOLLSTONECRAFT, "MANIFEST DESTINY"
**VIENT DE PARAITRE/JUST PUBLISHED**
Q/W/E/R/T/Y 9
(Arts, Litteratures et Civilisations du Monde Anglophone)
Q/W/E/R/T/Y is a yearly journal of English and American Studies
published by the Publications de l'Universite de Pau
(http://pubmc1.univ-pau.fr).
RENSEIGNEMENTS ET COMMANDES/INFORMATION AND ORDERS: Email:
pup@univ-pau.fr
Plus de renseignements sur/More information on Webpage:
http://pubmc1.univ-pau.fr
**TABLE OF CONTENTS**
(October 1999)
338 pages, 210FF
ISBN 2-908930-55-2 / ISSN 1169-2111
**WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE**
- Louise HO (The Chinese University of Hong Kong): "How 'Real' is
Richard III and does it matter?"
- Lisa HOPKINS (School of Cultural Studies, Sheffield Hallam
University): "Now by Saint Paul": Richard III's Constituency"
- Romuald Ian LAKOWSKI (University of British Columbia): "From History
to Myth: The Misogyny of Richard III in More's History and Shakespeare's
Play"
- Richard MADELAINE (University of New South Wales): "'Who Intercepts Me
in My Expeditions?': The Structural Function of The Boy-Actors' Roles in
Richard III"
- Elizabeth OAKES (Western Kentucky University): "Dramatic and
Competitive Intertextuality in the Wooing Scene in Richard III"
**THE SPECTATOR**
- Serge SOUPEL (Universite de Paris III - Sorbonne Nouvelle): "Notes sur
quelques inconsequenses dans The Spectator: les paradoxes du binaire
chez Joseph Addison".
**CHARLES DICKENS**
- Sheila BENSON: "A Levinasian Reading of Miss Havisham: Learning to
accept responsibility for the other"
- Michael HOLLINGTON (Universite de Toulouse-Le Mirail): "Wemmick's Pig:
Notes on the Recycling Economies of Great Expectations"
- Tore REM (Christ Church, Oxford): "Pip's Marshes and Wemming's Castle:
Nature in Dickens"
- Edgar ROSENBERG (Cornell University): "Towards Great Expectations:
From Notebook to Novel"
- Edgar ROSENBERG (Cornell University): "'Murder''Shot!' 'Drowned!': A
Note on Dickens's Descriptive Headlines"
- Paul SHEEHAN (Birkbeck College): "Marx, Money, and Monstrosity in
Great Expectations"
- Sara THORNTON (Universite de Paris VII - Denis Diderot): "The Burning
of Miss Havisham: Dickens, Fire and the 'Fire-Baptism'"
**WILLA CATHER**
- Ruth DERKSEN (Simon Fraser University): "'Other Ways of Telling'": An
Exploration of Orality & Literacy in Death comes for the Archibishop"
- Françoise PALLEAU-PAPIN (Universite François Rabelais - Tours):
"Figuration et figural dans Death comes for the Archibishop"
**RAYMOND CARVER**
- Emmanuelle DELANOE-BRUN (Universite de Paris VII - Denis Diderot),
Marie LE GRIX DE LA SALLE (Universite de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour):
"Altman lecteur de Carver: le contournement ironique"
- Mark A. R. FACKNITZ (James Madison University): "One More Reason We
Can't Stop Tugging over Raymond Carver's Body"
- Claire MANIEZ (Universite de Metz): "What's in a Title? au seuil des
nouvelles de Raymond Carver"
- Randolph Paul RUNYON (Miami University - Oxford, Ohio): "Altman's
Short Cuts: Three Unacknowledged Sources"
- Harold SCHWEIZER (Bucknell University): "Robert Altman's Short Cuts: a
Phenomenology of reading"
- Tess GALLAGHER (Sky House, Port Angeles, Washington): "Not
Translation, but Translatability: Carver to Altman/Story to Film
(Responding to Harold Schweizer's 'Phenomenology of reading')"
- Aaron SMITH (Universite de Pau & des Pays de l'Adour) "Raymond Carver,
Postmoderniste recalcitrant"
**TED HUGHES**
- Claas KAZZER (Universitat Leipzig): "Difficulties of a Bridegroom"
- Neil ROBERTS (University of Sheffield): "Hughes, the Laureateship and
National Identity"
**KAZUO ISHIGURO**
- Emilienne BANETH-NOUAILHETAS (Universite de Paris III-Sorbonne
Nouvelle.): "The Hazards of Uttering Witticism ou les dangers de
l'humour dans The Remains of the Day"
- Karl E. JIRGENS (Laurentian University): "Narrator Resartus:
Palimpsestic Revelations in Kazuo Ishiguro's The Remains of the Day"
- Didier MACHU (Universite de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour): "Stevens,
comedien, officier et paladin"
- Rebecca SUTER: "'We're like Butlers': Interculturality, Memory and
Responsibility in Kazuo Ishiguro's The Remains of the Day"
- Andrew TEVERSON (Westminster University): "Acts of Reading in Kazuo
Ishiguro's The Remains of the Day"
- Ben WINSWORTH (Universite d'Orleans): "Communicating and not
Communicating: the True and False in The Remains of the Day"
**MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT**
- Martine SPENSKY (Universite Blaise Pascal, Clermont-Ferrand II ):
"Mary Wollstonecraft, la 'citoyenne paradoxale' et la passion pour la
justice"
- Ashley TAUCHERT (University of Exeter): "The Union of the Sexes:
female Embodiment and Same Sex Desire in Mary Wollstonecraft's
Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1790)"
**THE UNITED STATES' "MANIFEST DESTINY," XIXth CENTURY**
- Brad CARTWRIGHT (University of Colorado at Boulder): "Reconsidering
Race and Manifest Destiny: John O'Sullivan, Young America and Pan-Ethnic
Expansion in the 1840s"
- Mark NIEMEYER (Universite Paris IV-Sorbonne): "Manifest Destiny and
Melville's Moby Dick, or Enlightenment Universalism and Aggressive
Nineteenth-Century Expansionism in a National Text"
- Philippe GOUVET (Universite de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour): "Destinée
manifeste: le double tranchant de la hache"
- Marie-Jeanne ROSSIGNOL (Universite Paris VII): "Des Pères Pèlerins à
la guerre du Vietnam: l'historiographie récente de 'manifest destiny'
aux états-unis"
- Naomi WULF (Universite Paris XII-Val de Marne): "John O'Sullivan, The
United States and Democratic Review et la mission démocratique des
Etats-Unis avant 1845"
Bertrand Rouge
Universite de Pau
France
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