1st Edition

Textual Practice Volume 9 Issue 2

Edited By Lindsay Smith, Alan Sinfield, Jean Howard Copyright 1996

    Since its launch in 1987 TP has been Britain's principla international journal of radical literary studies, continually pressing theory into new engagements. Today, as customary relations among disciplines and media are questioned and transformed, TP works at the turning points of theory with politics, history and texts. It is intrigued by the processes through which hitherto marginal cultures of ethnicity and sexuality are becoming conceptually central, and by the consequences of these diverse disturbances for educational and cultural institutions. Textual Practice is available both on subscription and from bookstores. For a Free Sample Copy or further subscription details please contact Trevina Johnson, Routledge Subscriptions, ITPS Ltd., North Way, Andover SP10 5BE. UK.

    Bakhtin's Homesickness: A Late Reply to Julia Kristeva Daphne Erdinast-Vulcan History, Narrative, and Responsibility: Speech Acts in Henry James's `The Aspern Papers' J. Hillis Miller A Conversation with Lynne Tilman Peter Nicholls Technologies of `the Child': Towards a Theory of the Child-Subject Jo-Ann Wallace The Dream of a Common Language: Hannah More and Mary Wollstonecraft Harriet Guest Filming Shakespeare in a Cultural Thaw: Soviet Appropriations of Shakespeare's Treacheries in 1955-56 Laurie Osborne Reviews

    Biography

    Deputy Editor: Lindsay Smith, Alan Sinfield, Jean Howard US Associate Editor:

    `You cannot ignore TP. Its international cast of contributors, well-known and new, engages today's theoretical and practical debates from the roots of modernity into post-modernism, from the politics of sexual preference, to the future of the Left, from literature to activism, with the lines crossing and recrossing.' - Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University

    `Textual Practice contains some of the most path-breaking, adventurous critical writing currently to be found in Britain'. - Terry Eagleton, Linacre College, Oxford