A journal of literary criticism, covering all periods of literary history. One of North America's oldest scholarly journals. Published by @UTexasPress.
Interested in publishing in one of North America's oldest journals in English studies? Submit your essay to [email protected]. Research in all eras and areas of literary studies is welcome. Submission details:
Congratulations to Benjamin Schwartz, whose essay, "The Unfinishedness & Untimeliness of A Raisin in the Sun" has won the Volume 64 Tony Hilfer Prize for best essay written by a graduate student!
Congratulations to Paul Schmidt, whose essay, " 'No Sorcery:' Chess, Artistic Sensibility, and Subjective Development in Walter Tevis’ The Queen’s Gambit" has won the Volume 64 Tony Hilfer Prize for best essay!
Gregory Phipps
“‘He Wished That He Could Be an Idea in Their Minds’: Legal Pragmatism and the Construction of White Subjectivity in Richard Wright’s Native Son.”
https://t.co/cBdqYvDyhp
https://t.co/RbZ7Kkt6U3
In honor of #BlackHistoryMonth, we'd like to highlight Richard Wright’s Native Son, a portrait of the experience of Black youth in 1930s Chicago. Read one of TSLL’s articles discussing Native Son, and the contributor’s recent thoughts on how the novel relates to the world today.
Read “Howard Jacobson’s Shylock Is My Name and the Badiou-Agamben Debate on Paul the Apostle” by Jaecheol Kim in TSLL’s Fall 2022 issue: https://t.co/OATsEaLKsv
Jaecheol Kim shines a spotlight on Shakespeare, modern adaptations, and Jewish identity in an interview with Nicolas Silva. The interview is available here on the @UTPressJournals blog: https://t.co/2QY7un8kc7
Read “‘No Sorcery’: Chess, Artistic Sensibility, and Subjective Development in The Queen’s Gambit” by Paul Schmidt in TSLL’s Fall 2022 issue: https://t.co/yLz91tX18L
Are you a fan of The Queen’s Gambit? Are you fascinated by the artistry of chess or the skillfulness of art? Check out this intriguing interview with Paul Schmidt, conducted by Leslie Peterson, on the @UTPressJournals blog: https://t.co/lmN8n1feLz
Check out “‘The Moon Slides Down the Stair / To See Who's There’: The Poetics of the Crossword and the Cross Words of Poetics” by David Ben-Merre in TSLL’s Summer 2022 issue: https://t.co/jytvQkbHN4
Puzzled about the connection between crosswords and poetry? To learn more, read this exciting interview with David Ben-Merre, conducted by intern Leslie Peterson, on the @UTPressJournals blog: https://t.co/rSJYUPoNSX