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In this Issue
MFS publishes scholarly essays that analyze the important aesthetic, cultural, political, and environmental developments currently shaping today’s academic and public conversations. A leading international literature and humanities journal, MFS focuses on the various modalities and uses of fiction in the broadest sense of the term—publishing material designed to speak to a wide audience of scholars, public intellectuals, and cultural practitioners working across diverse fields, regions, and venues. Now in its sixty-eighth year, MFS is published by Johns Hopkins University Press and is available online at Project MUSE.
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Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 48, Number 2, Summer 2002Table of Contents

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View The Women Do Not Travel: Gender, Difference, and Incommensurability in Conrad's Heart of Darkness
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View A Dangerous Circuit: Loss and the Boundaries of Racialized Subjectivity in Joy Kogawa's Obasan and Kerri Sakamoto's The Electrical Field
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View Struggles Over the Word: Race and Religion in O'Connor, Faulkner, Hurston, and Wright (review)
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ISSN | 1080-658X |
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Print ISSN | 0026-7724 |
Launched on MUSE | 2002-06-01 |
Open Access | No |
Copyright
Copyright © 2002 for the Purdue Research Foundation.
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