There’s never been a better time to submit to ESQ! Due to an unexpected delay with an upcoming special issue, we are seeking strong submissions for publication in fall/winter 2022. Guidelines/feature info here: https://t.co/Agd8BQrebg
This project is an excellent opportunity to work with other ppl in yr field + publish with a nationally recognized journal. If you are interested, please send a CV and brief message describing your scholarly interests to Rachel Brown at [email protected] by Fri, Feb 18
We are seeking grad students to compose a collaborative article on the upcoming @C19americanists conference for our "The Year in Conferences" (YiC) feature. Prospective reporters need to attend the conference & should be pursuing a PhD in 19th American lit or related field (1/2)
We are happy to announce two new special features: “Findings,” which highlights a “lost” or forgotten text & “Resonances,” which considers how a 19thc text reverberates today. Please write to us or read our site for more info on submitting!
https://t.co/sgioBajg0x
ESQ’s COVID cluster is out, featuring an intro by yours truly (“Love, Death, and the Nineteenth-Century Americanist”) and moving pieces about pedagogy and scholarship from a range of top-notch C19 voices. A time of trauma, sentiment, innovation, and love. @ESQJournal
Very proud to have an essay in the new issue of @ESQJournal esp bc collaborating w Danielle Coriale was life-sustaining for me last year & changed how I think about teaching & writing (read it here: The Society to Encourage Studies at Home (in a Pandemic) https://t.co/XX8uUwZEmA
Congratulations to 65.2 author Gordon Fraser, winner of the 1921 Prize in American Literature (Untenured category)! Read his essay, "Distributed Agency: David Walker’s Appeal, Black Readership, and the Politics of Self-Deportation" on Project MUSE here: https://t.co/dbnYo8d9C3
soon to be released from @Literature_CUP : A Question of Time: American Literature from Colonial Encounter to Contemporary Fiction, edited by Cindy Weinstein with work from great contributors like Christopher Looby and Julia Stern. Find out more here: https://t.co/NEDCRNouPE
Congratulations to Matthew Knip on winning the 2017 Hennig Cohen Prize of the Melville Society for his ESQ 62.2 essay, "Homosocial Desire and Erotic Communitas in Melville Imaginary: The Evidence of Van Buskirk"! Take a look at the essay on Project MUSE if you haven't already!