Contents of the Full Run of the John Donne Journal (Volumes 1-33)
VOLUME 1.1-2 (1982)
Contents
A.B. Chambers. Glorified Bodies and the
"Valediction: forbidding Mourning." 1-20.
A.J. Smith. No Man Is a Contradiction. 21-38.
Annabel Patterson. Misinterpretable Donne: The Testimony of the Letters. 39-54.
John R. Roberts. John Donne's Poetry: An Assessment of Modern Criticism. 55-68.
Anthony Low. The "Turning Wheele": Carew, Jonson, Donne and the First Law of Motion. 69-80.
Stanley Stewart. Two Types of Traherne
Centuries. 81-100.
Michael P. Parker. Carew's Politic Pastoral: Virgilian Pretexts in the "Answer to Aurelian Townsend." 101-116.
S.K. Heninger, Jr. "Metaphor" and Sidney's
Defence of Poesie. 117-150.
A. Leigh DeNeef. Ploughing Virgilian Furrows:
The Genres of
Faerie Queene VI. 151-166
VOLUME 2.1 (1983)
Contents
John T. Shawcross. A Text of John Donne's Poems: Unsatisfactory Compromise. 1-20.
Ernest W. Sullivan, II. Replicar Editing of John Donne's Texts. 21-30.
Pamela L. Royston.
Hero and Leander and the Eavesdropping Reader. 31-54.
Judy Z. Kronenfeld. Probing the Relation between
Poetry and Ideology: Herbert's "The Windows." 55-80.
Sean Kane. The Paradoxes of Idealism: Book Two
of
The Faerie Queene. 81-110.
Anthony Low.
Review Essay: John Carey
and John Donne. 111-121.
VOLUME 2.2 (1983)
Contents
Dennis Flynn. The "
Annales School" and
the Catholicism of Donne's Family. 1-10.
Achsah Guibbory. A Sense of the Future:
Projected Audiences of Donne and Jonson. 1-22.
Sidney Gottlieb.
Elegies Upon the Author:
Defining, Defending, and Surviving Donne. 23-38
Michael C. Schoenfeldt. Submission and
Assertion: The "Double Motion" of Herbert's "Dedication". 39-50.
Edward J. Rielly. Marvell's "Fleckno,"
Anti-Catholicism, and the Pun as Metaphor. 51-62.
Alan T. Bradford. Nathanael Richards, Jacobean
Playgoer. 63-78.
Ernest W. Sullivan, II.
Donne Manuscripts:
Dalhousie II. 79-90.
Annabel Patterson.
Review Essay:
Talking About Power. 91-106.
VOLUME 3.1 (1984)
Contents
Ted-Larry Pebworth. Manuscript Poems and Print
Assumptions: Donne and His Modern Editors. 1-23.
Stanton J. Linden. Compasses and Cartography: Donne's "A
Valediction: forbidding Mourning". 23-34.
Thomas Willard.Donne's Anatomy Lesson: Vesalian or
Paracelsian. 25-62.
John T. Shawcross.The Making of the Variorum Text of
Anniversaries.
63-72.
Ilona Bell. Revision and Revelation in Herbert's
"Affliction (I)". 73-96.
James S. Baumlin. A Note on the 1649/1650 Editions on
Donne's
Poems. 97-98.
Dennis Flynn.
Review Essay: A Problematic Text.
99-104.
Horton Davies.
Review Essay: Calvinism and
Literary Culture. 105-112.
Albert C. Labriola.
Review: Donne Well-Done.
113-116.
Robert W. Halli, Jr.. Drinking with Donne: December 13,
1610. 117.
VOLUME 3.2 (1984)
Contents
Dennis Flynn. Jasper Mayne's Translation of Donne's Latin
Epigrams. 121-130.
Joseph E. Grennen. Donne on the Growth and Infiniteness of
Love. 131-140.
Jill Baumgaertner. "Harmony" in Donne's "La Corona" and
"Upon the Translation of the Psalms". 141-156.
Joseph E. Duncan. Donne's "Hymne to God my God, in my
sickness" and Iconographic Tradition. 157-180.
Raymond A. Anselment. The oxford University Poets and
Caroline Panegyric. 181-202.
Ernest W. Sullivan, II.
Donne Manuscripts:
Dalhousie I. 203-220.
Jonathan F. S. Post.
Review Essay: Reforming
The
Temple: Recent Criticism of George Herbert. 221-248.
Ronald J. Corthell.
Review Essay: Joseph Hill and
Seventeenth-Century Literature. 249-270.
VOLUME 4.1 (1985)
Contents
Anthony Low. The Compleat Angler's "Baite": or,
The Subverter Subverted. 1-12.
Patrick F. O'Connell. "Restore Thine Image":
Structure and Theme in Donne's "Goodfriday." 13-28.
Julia M. Walker. "Here you see mee": Donne's
Autographed Valediction. 29-34.
Frances M. Malpezzi. The Withered Garden in
Herbert's "Grace." 35-48.
David P. Jaeckle. Marvell's Reformed Theory of
Architecture:
Upon Appleton House, I-X. 49-68.
Maureen Sabine. Crashaw and the Feminine Animus:
Patterns of Self-Sacrifice in Two of His Devotional Poems. 69-94.
Paul A. Parrish. Cowley and Crashaw on Hope.
95-108.
Review Essays
A.B. Chambers. Will the Real John Donne Please
Rise? 109-144.
Leah S. Marcus. Report from the Opposition Camp:
Jonson Studies in the 1980s. 121-144.
Pamela L. Royston. Genre, Genius, and Genealogy:
Revising Literary History. 145-159.
VOLUME 4.2 (1985) SPECIAL ISSUE
The Metaphysical Poets in the Nineteenth
Century
Edited by Antony H. Harrison
Contents
Antony H. Harrison. Reception Theory and the New
Historicism: The Metaphysical Poets in the Nineteenth Century.
163- 181.
John B. Hodgson. Coleridge, Puns, and "Donne's
First Poem": The Limbo of Rhetoric and the Conceptions of Wit.
181-200.
John T. Shawcross. Opulence and Iron Pokers:
Coleridge and Donne. 201-224.
Dayton Haskin. Reading Donne's
Songs and
Sonets in the Nineteenth Century. 225-252.
John Maynard. Browning, Donne, and the
Triangulation of the Dramatic Monologue. 253-268.
Diane D'Amico. Reading and Rereading George
Herbert and Christina Rossetti. 269-290.
John Griffin. Tractarians and Metaphysicals: The
Failure of Influence. 291-302.
Jerome Bump. Hopkins, Metalepsis, and the
Metaphysicals. 303-330.
James Dorrill. Hardy, Donne, and the Tolling
Bell. 331-336.
Raoul Granquist. A "Fashionable Poet" in New
England in the 1890s: A Study of the Reception of John Donne.
337-350.
Linda Palumbo. Cultivation in the Wilderness: A
Review Essay. 351-359.
VOLUME 5.1-2 (1986) SPECIAL ISSUE
Essays in Literature and the Visual Arts
Edited by Richard S. Peterson
Contents
Clark Hulse. Shakespeare's Sonnets and the Art
of the Face. 3-26.
Alan T. Bradford. Use And Uniformity in
Elizabethan Architecture and Drama. 27-62.
Ernest B. Gilman. "To adore, or scorne an
image": Donne and the Iconoclast Controversy. 63-100.
David Evett. Donne's Poems and the Five Styles
of Renascence Art. 101-132.
Murray Roston. Herbert and Mannerism. 133-168.
Richard S. Peterson. Icon and Mystery in
Jonson's
Masque of Beautie. 169-200.
John Peacock. Inigo Jones and the Florentine
Court Theater. 201-234.
Cedric C. Brown. The
Komos in Milton.
235-266.
David Sturdy. Bodley's Bookcases: "This goodly
Magazine of witte". 267-290.
John Dixon Hunt. The Portrait of William Style
of Langley: Some Reflections. 291-310.
VOLUME 6.1 (1987)
Contents
David M. Sullivan. Riders to the West: "Goodfriday, 1613."
1-8.
Jeanne Shami. Kings and Desperate Men: John Donne Preaches
at Court. 9-24.
Ronald J. Corthell. "Coscus onely breeds my just offence":
A Note on Donne's "Satire II" and the Inns of Court. 25-32.
Paul W. Harland. Imagination and Affections in John
Donne's Preaching. 33-50.
Robert H. Ray. Another Perspective on Donne in the
Seventeenth Century: Nehemiah Rogers's Allusions to the
Sermons and "A Hymne to God the Father". 51-54.
Donald R. Dickson. Grace and the "Spirits" of the Heart in
The Temple. 55-66.
Ann Baynes Coiro. Herrick's "Julia" Poems. 67-90.
Dale B.J. Randall.
Phosphore Redde Diem: Ancient
Starlight in Quarles'
Emblems I.14. 91-108.
W. Speed Hill. John Donne's
Biathanatos:
Authenticity, Authority, and Context in Three Editions. 109-134.
Review Essays
Raymond B. Waddington. "When thou hast done, thou hast not done." 135-146.
Eugene Cunnar. Steps to Crashaw. 147-150.
Anthony Low. Sister Arts. 151-158.
Michael P. Parker. Annotating Aurelian. 159-161.
VOLUME 6.2 (1987)
Contents
Dennis Flynn. Donne's
Ignatius His Conclave and Other
Libels on Robert Cecil. 163-184.
A.B. Chambers. "Goodfriday, 1613. Riding Westward":
Looking Back. 185-202.
John T. Shawcross. The Concept of
Sermo in Donne
and Herbert. 203-212.
Peter Beal. More Donne Manuscripts. 213-218.
Ernest W. Sullivan, II. Updating the John Donne Listings
in Peter Beal's
Index of Englsih Literary Manuscripts.
219-234.
Paul R. Sellin and Augustus J. Veenendaal, Jr. A "Pub
Crawl" Through Old The Hague: Shady Light on Life and Art Among
English Friends of John Donne in The Netherlands, 1627-1635.
235-260.
Daniel P. Jaeckle. Marvell's Dialogics of History: Upon
Appleton House, XI-XXXV. 261-274.
Judith Dundas. "Arachnean Eyes": A Mythological Emblem in
the Poetry of George Chapman. 275-284.
Review Essays
Anthony Low. Grief, Anger, and
Consolation, 285-288.
Andrew M. Mclean and J. Lawrence Gunter. Donne Done Into
German. 289-294.
Achsah Guibbory. The Directions of Indirection. 295-298.
Stanley Stewart. Georgic and the Absence of Georgic.
299-303.
VOLUME 7.1 (1988)
Contents
Mary Ann Radzinowicz. The Politics of Donne's Silences.
1-20.
Louis L. Martz. Donne and Herbert: Vehement Grief and
Silent Tears. 21-34.
Dennis Flynn. "Awry and Squint": The Dating of Donne's
Holy Sonnets. 35-46.
Helen B. Brooks. "Soules Language": Reading Donne's "The
Extasie." 47-64.
Sallye Sheppeard. Eden and Agony in "Twicknam Garden."
65-72.
Richard Harp. Jonson's "To Penshurst": The Country House
as Church. 73-90.
Reid Barbour. "Wee, of th' adult'rate mixture not
complaine": Thomas Carew and Poetic Hybridity. 91-114.
Notes
John T. Shawcross. On Some Early References to John Donne.
115-118.
Bernard Richards. Donne's "Aire and Angels": A Gross
Misreading. 119-122.
James A. Riddell. A Previously Unnoticed Source for a Poem
by Ben Jonson. 123-124.
Review Essays
Anthony Low. Donne and the New Historicism. 125-132.
Julia M. Walker. "Left/Write/Right" Of Lock-Jaw and
Literary Criticism. 133-139.
VOLUME 7.2 (1988)
Contents
John T. Shawcross. But Is It Donne's? The Problem of
Titles on His Poems. 141-150.
James S. Baumlin. Donne's Poetics of Absence. 151-182.
Joseph E. Duncan. Resurrections in Donne's "A Hymne to God
the Father" and "Hymne to God my God, in my sicknesse." 183-196.
Robert Thomas Fallon. Donne's "Strange Fire" and the
"Elegies on the Author's Death." 197-212.
Robert C. Evans. Sir John Harington and Thomas Sutton: New
Letters from Charterhouse. 213-238.
Howard Canaan. Meaning, Shape,
and Number in Upon Appleton House. 239-256.
Reviews Essays
Jonathan F.S. Post. Herrick,
Cultural Clout, and the Burden of Simplicity. 257-272.
Stanley Stewart. Imagining Dutch Reformed Donne. 273-286.
VOLUME 8 (1989)
Contents
Ernest W. Sullivan II. Who Was Reading/Writing Donne Verse
in the Seventeenth Century? 1-16.
Celestin J. Walby. The Westmoreland Text of Donne's First
Epithalamium. 17-36.
Graham Roebuck. Donne's Visual Imagination and Compasses.
37-56.
Noralyn Masselink. Donne's Epistemology and the Appeal to
Memory. 57-88.
Yameng Liu. The Making of Elizabeth Drury: The Voice of
God in "Anatomy of the World." 89-102.
Sharon Cadman Seelig. In Sickness and Health: Donne's
Devotions
Upon Emergent Occasions. 103-114.
M.L. Donnelly. "To furder or represse": Donne's Calling.
115-124.
Winfried Schliner. Donne's Coterie Sermon. 125-132.
Robert C. Evans. John Donne, Governor of Charterhouse.
133-150.
Joanne Altieri.
Hero and Leander: Sensible Myth
and Lyric Subjectivity. 151-166.
Kristine Wolberg. All Possible Art:
The Country Parson and Courtesy. 167-190.
Barbara Looney. Marvell's Dewdrop: Two Possibilities for
the Soul. 191-193.
VOLUME 9.1 (1990) SPECIAL ISSUE
Interpreting "Aire and Angels"
Edited by Achsah Guibbory
Contents
R.V. Young. Angels in "Aire and Angels." 1-14.
Stella P. Revard. The Angelic Messenger in "Aire and
Angels." 15-18.
Phoebe S. Spinrad. "Aire and Angels" and Questionable
Shapes. 19-22.
Michael C. Schoenfeldt. Patriarchal Assumptions and
Egalitarian Designs. 23-26.
Judith Scherer Herz. Resisting Mutuality. 27-32.
John T. Shawcross. Donne's "Aire and Angels": Text and
Context. 33-42.
John R. Roberts. "Just such disparitie": The Critical
Debate About "Aire and Angels." 43-64.
Arnold Stein. Interpretation: "Aire and Angels." 65-76.
Albert C. Labriola. "This Dialogue of One": Rational
Argument and Affective Discourse in Donne's "Aire and Angels."
77-84.
Janel Mueller. The Play of Difference in Donne's "Aire and
Angels." 85-94.
Camille Wells Slights. Air, Angels, and Progress of Love.
95-104.
Achsah Guibbory. Donne, the Idea of Woman, and the
Experience of Love. 105-112.
VOLUME 9.2 (1990)
Contents
Anne Barbeau. Donne and the Real Presence of the Absent
Lover. 113-124.
Graham Roebuck. Elegies for Donne: Great Tew and the
Poets,. 125-136.
John T. Shawcross. An Important Volume of Donne's Poetry
and Prose. 137-140.
Ernest W. Sullivan II. Updating the John Donne Listings in
Peter Beal's
Index of English Literary Manuscripts, II.
141-148.
Lauren Silberman. To Write Sorrow in Jonson's "On my First
Sonne." 149-156.
Esther Gilman Richey. "Wrapt in Nights Mantle": George
Herbert's Parabolic Art. 157-172.
Review Essays
Maureen Sabine. "My Soul's Country-Man": The Critical
Recovery of Crashaw. 173-182.
Anthony Low. The Problem of Mysticism. 183-187.
VOLUME 10.1-2 (1991)
Contents
Claude Summers and Ted-Larry Pebworth. Donne's
Correspondence with Wotton. 1-36.
Graham Roebuck. Donne's
Lamentations of Jeremy Reconsidered. 37-44.
Theresa DiPasquale. Ambivalent Mourning: Sacramentality,
Idolatry, and Gender in "Since she whome I lovd hath payd her last
debt." 45-56.
Koos Daley. "And Like a Widdow Thus": Donne, Huygens, and
the Fall of Heidelberg. 57-70.
Gary Stringer. Donne's Epigram on the Earl of Nottingham.
71-74.
John T. Shawcross. Some Further Early Allusions to Donne.
75-78.
Satyre III Colloquium. Stringer, Sellin, Slights,
Hester. 79-102.
Hal Hellwig. The Poet's Role in Rhetoric: Herbert in the
Service of the Lord. 103-110.
Richard Todd. Carew's "crowne of Bayes": Epideixis and the
Performative Rendering of Donne's Poetic Voice. 111-128.
Dan Jaeckle. De-Authorizing in Marvell's
The Rehearsal
Transpros'd. 129-142.
VOLUME 11.1-2 (1992)
Contents
Jeanne Shami. Introduction: Reading Donne's Sermons. 1-20.
Paul W. Harland. Donne's Political Intervention in the
Parliament of 1629. 21-38.
Gale H. Carrithers, Jr., and James D. Hardy, Jr. Love,
Power, Dust Royall, Gavelkinde: Donne's Politics. 39-58.
Lori Anne Ferrell. Donne and His Master's Voice, 1615-
1625. 59-72.
Meg Lota Brown. "Though it be not according to the Law":
Donne's Politics and the Sermon on Esther. 73-84.
Noralyn Masselink. A Matter of Interpretation: Example and
Donne's Role as Preacher and as Poet. 85-98.
Mark Vessey. Consulting the Fathers: Invention and
Mediation in Donne's Sermon on Psalm 51:7 ("Purge me with
hyssope"). 99-110.
Lindsay A. Mann. Misogyny and Libertinism: Donne's
Marriage Sermons. 111-132.
Dayton Haskin. John Donne and the Cultural Contradicitons
of Christmas. 133-157.
VOLUME 12.1-2 (1993)
Contents
Maria J. Pando Canteli. "One like none, and lik'd of
none": John Donne and the Grotesque Representation of the Female
Body. 1-16.
Elaine Perez Zickler. "nor in nothing, nor in things": The
case of love and desire in John Donne's
Songs and Sonets.
17-40.
L.E. Semler. John Donne and the Early Maniera. 41-66.
Ann Hurley. Donne's "Good Friday, Riding Westward, 1613"
and the
Illustrated Meditative Tradition. 67-78.
Joan Faust. John Donne's Verse Letters to the Countess of
Bedford: Mediators in a Poet-Patroness Relationship. 79-100.
A.E.B. Coldiron. "Poets be silent": Self-Silencing
Conventions and Rhetorical Context in the 1633 Critical Elegies on
Donne. 101-114.
Deborah Aldrich Larson. Donne's Contemporary Reputation:
Evidence from Some Commonplace Books and Manuscript Miscellanies.
115- 130.
Robert G. Collmer. Elizabeth Drury in the United States.
131-138.
J.T. Rhodes. Continuities: The Ongoing English Catholic
Tradition from the 1570s to the 1630s. 139-152.
Tiree MacGregor and C.Q. Drummond. The Authorship of "Fair
Friend, 'tis true, your beauties move." 153-168.
Joe Snader.
The Compleat Angler and the Problems
of Scientific Methodology. 169-189.
VOLUME 13.1-2 (1994)
Contents
Kate Frost. The Lothian Portrait: A New Description. 1-12.
R.E. Pritchard. Donne's Image and Dream. 13-28.
Jill Pelaez Baumgaertner. Political Play and Theological
Uncertainty in the
Anniversaries. 29-50.
Roger Rollin. John Donne's
Holy Sonnets - The
Sequel:
Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions. 51-60.
Helen Wilcox. Squaring the Circle: Metaphors of the Divine
in the Work of Donne and His Contemporaries. 61-80.
Emma L. Roth-Schwartz. John Donne's "Nocturnall Upon S.
Lucies Day": Punctuation and the Editor. 81-100.
Robert Parker Sorlien. Apostasy Reversed: Donne and Tobie
Matthew. 101-112.
John Shawcross. More Early Allusions to Donne and Herbert.
113-124.
Colloquium: "A Valediction forbidding Mourning"
Diana Trevino Benet. Introduction. 125-126.
Janice Whittington. The Text of Donne's "A Valediction
forbidding Mourning." 127-136.
Judith Scherer Herz. Reading [out] Biography in
"Valediction forbidding Mourning." 137-142.
Graham Roebuck. "A Valediction forbidding Mourning":
Traditions and Problems of the Imagery. 143-150.
Jack Durant.
Religio Laici and the Fate of Texts.
151-166.
Book Reviews
Stanley Stewart. A Priest to the Geneva Temple. 167-180 .
P.G. Stanwood. "In cypher writ": The Design of Donne's
Devotions.
181-186.
Dennis Flynn. Exegesis before Eisegesis. 187-192.
VOLUME 14 (1995) SPECIAL ISSUE
New Uses of Biographical and Historical Evidence in Donne Studies
Edited by Dennis Flynn
Contents
Jeanne Shami. "The Stars in their Order Fought
Against Sisera": John Donne and the Pulpit Crisis of 1622. 1-58.
Peter McCullough. Preaching to a Court Papist?
Donne's Sermon Before Queen Anne, December 1617. 59-82.
Tom Cain. Donne and the Prince D'Amour. 83-112.
Albert C. Labriola. Sacerdotalism and Sainthood
in the Poetry and Life of John Donne: "The Canonization" and
Canonization. 113-126.
Maureen Sabine. "Thou art the best of mee": A.S.
Byatt's
Possession and the Literary Possession of Donne,
127-148.
Michael W. Price. "Jeasts which cozen your
Expectatyonn": Reassessing John Donne's
Paradoxes and
Problems, 149-184.
Dennis Flynn. Donne, Henry Wotton, and the Earl
of Essex, 185-218.
Annabel Patterson. Afterword. 219-230.
VOLUME 15 (1996)
Contents
M.L. Stapleton. "Why should they not alike in all parts
touch?": Donne and the Elegiac Tradition, 1-22.
Achsah Guibbory. "The Relique,"
The Song of Songs,
and Donne's
Songs and Sonets. 23-44.
John T. Shawcross. Some Rereadings of John Donne's Poems.
45-62.
Rodney Stenning Edgecombe. Eschatological Elements in
Donne's "Anniversarie." 63-74.
Donald Friedman. Christ's Image and Likeness in Donne.
75-94.
Kate Frost. The Lothian Portrait. 95-126.
Ted-Larry Pebworth. The Early Audiences of Donne's Poetic
Performances, 127-140.
Graham Roebuck.
Johannes Factus and the Anvil of
the Wits. 141-152.
P.G. Stanwood. Donne's Art of Preaching and the
Reconstruction of Tertullian. 153-170.
Bryan N.S. Gooch. Music for Donne. 171-188.
Barry Spurr. The John Donne Papers of Wesley Milgate.
189-202.
Book Reviews
Maurine Sabine. "A Place of Honor": Dennis Flynn's
Biography of Donne. 203-212.
Jeanne Shami. Donne's Political Casuistry: An
Introduction. 213-218.
Brian Blackley. Claude and Ted-Larry's Excellent
Adventure. 219-233.
VOLUME 16 (1997)
Contents
Annabel Patterson. Donne in Shadows: Pictures and
Politics. 1-36.
Anne Prescott. Donne's Rabelais. 37-58.
Terry G. Sherwood.
Ego Videbo: Donne and the
Vocational Self. 59-114.
Richard B. Wollman. Donne's Obscurity: Memory and
Manuscript Culture. 115-136.
Stephen Burt. Donne the Sea Man. 137-184.
Stephen J. Maynard. "Here you see mee": The Trope of
Avoidance in John Donne. 185-208.
Ann Hurley. Donne's "Nocturnall" and Festival. 209-220.
Notes
Len Ferry. "Till busy hands / Blot out the text": Realme in
Satyre III. 221-228.
Book Review
P.G. Stanwood. Recovering Donne's Sermons. 229-233.
VOLUME 17 (1998)
Contents
Margaret J. M. Ezell. A Possible Story of Judith Donne: A
Life of Her Own? 9-28.
Thomas A. Festa. Donne's
Anniversaries and His Anatomy of the Book. 29-60.
Jeff Westover. Suns and Lovers: Instability in
Donne's "A Lecture upon the Shadow." 61-73.
Arthur Lindley. John Donne, "Batter my Heart,"
and English Rape Law. 75-88.
Shelley Karen Perlove. Witnessing the
Crucifixion: Rembrandt and John Donne's "Good Friday, 1613. Riding
Westward." 89-106.
Kate Narveson. Piety and the Genre of Donne's
Devotions.
107-136.
Mary Ann Koory. "England's Second Austine": John
Donne's Resistance to Conversion. 137-161.
Elena Levy-Navarro. "Goe forth ye daughters of
Sion": Divine Authority, the King, and the Church in Donne's
Denmark House Sermon. 163-173.
Gary A. Stringer. Filiating Scribal Manuscripts:
The Example of Donne's Elegies. 175-189.
D. Audell Shelburne. The Textual Problem of
"Twicknam Garden." 191-204.
Book Reviews
Paul J. Voss. Desiring Ideology. 205-208.
Dennis Flynn. "The meate was mine": New Work
from the Oxford School. 209-215.
The Donne Variorum
William Proctor Williams. A Variorum: "How It Goes."
217-226.
John T. Shawcross. Using the Variorum Edition of
John Donne's Poetry. 227-247.
VOLUME 1.1-2 (1982)
Contents
Anthony Raspa. Donne's
Pseudo-Martyr and
Essayes
in Divinity as Companion Pieces. 1-12.
Stella P. Revard. Donne's "The Bracelet":
Trafficking in Gold and Love. 13-23.
Allison Spreuwenberg-Stewart. "To His Mistress
Going to Bed," or "Could You Lend Me Your Clothes?" 25-59.
L. M. Gorton. Philosophy and the City: Space in
Donne. 61-71.
Albert C. Labriola. Lure and Allure in Donne's
"Aire and Angels." 73-82.
Reuben Sanchez. Menippean Satire and Competing
Prose Styles in
Ignatius His Conclave. 83-99.
Julia Brett. Distance, Demystification, and
Donne's Divine Poetry. 101-126.
Paul W. Harland. Donne and Virginia: The
Ideology of Conquest. 127-152.
Donald W. Rude. John Donne in
The Female
Tatler: A Forgotten Eighteenth-Century Appreciation.
153-166.
John T. Shawcross. Additional Donne and Herbert
Allusions. 167-176.
Pamela Royston Macfie. Ghostly Metamorphoses:
Chapman, Marlowe, and Ovid's Philomela. 177-193.
Colloquium: "Farewell to Love"
Ann Hurley. Introduction. 195-200.
Gary A. Stringer. The Text of "Farewell to
Love." 201-213.
Graham Roebuck. Into the Shadows...: Donne's
"Farewell to Love." 215-227.
Richard Todd. "Farewell to Love": "Things" as
Artifacts, "thing[s]" as Shifting Signifiers. 229-241.
Theresa M. DiPasquale. The Things Not Seen in
Donne's "Farewell to Love." 243-253.
Book Reviews
Anthony Low. Lost in a Book. 255-260.
Richard Harp. Reading Ritual. 261-266.
The Donne Variorum
Gary Stringer. More on Reading "How It Goes." 267-275.
VOLUME 19 (2000)
Donne Returns to
Loseley
Contents
Paul J. Voss. Sir Thomas More in the Year of
Donne's Birth. 1-18.
Maureen Sabine. Illumina Tenebras Nostras
Domina—Donne at Evensong. 19-44.
María J. Pando Canteli. The Poetics of Space in
Donne's Love Poetry. 45-57.
Ilona Bell. Courting Anne More. 59-86.
John T. Shawcross. The Meditative Path and
Personal Poetry. 87-99.
Helen B. Brooks. "When I would not I change in
vowes, and in devotione": Donne's "Vexations" and the Ignatian
Meditative Model." 101-137.
Kate Gartner Frost and William J. Scheick. Signing at Cross Purpose: Resignation in Donne's "Holy Sonnet I."
139-161.
Catherine Gimelli Martin. The Advancement
of Learning and the Decay of the World: A New Reading of
Donne's
First Anniversary. 163-203.
Ted-Larry Pebworth and Claude J. Summers. Contexts and Strategies: Donne's Elegy on Prince Henry. 205-222.
R. V. Young. Donne and Bellarmine. 223-234.
Mary Arshagouni Papazian. John Donne and the
Thirty Years' War. 235-266.
Florence Sandler. "The Gallery to the New
World": Donne, Herbert and Ferrar on the Virginia Project.
267-297.
Ernest W. Sullivan, II. Poems, by J. D.:
Donne's Corpus and His Bawdy, Too. 299-309.
Dayton Haskin. Coleridge's Marginalia on the
Seventeenth-Century Divines and the Perusal of Our Elder Writers.
311-337.
Mary Alexander. Pyrford, Pyrford Place, and
Queen Elizabeth's Summerhouse. 339-360.
VOLUME 20 (2001)
Contents
Richard S. Peterson. New Evidence on Donne's Monument: I.
1-51.
Paul Stevens. Donne's Catholicism and the
Innovation of the Modern Nation State. 53-70.
Thomas Fulton. Hamlet's Inky Cloak and Donne's
Satyres.
71-106.
Dennis Flynn. Donne's Most Daring
Satyre:
"richly For service paid, authoriz'd." 107-120.
Barry Spurr. The Theology of
La Corona.
121-139.
Theresa M. DiPasquale. "to good ends": The Final
Cause of Sacramental Womanhood in
The First Anniversarie.
141-150.
Sara Anderson. Phonological Analysis and Donne's
"Nocturnall." 151-160.
Nathanial B. Smith. The Apparition of a
Seventeenth-Century Donne Reader: A Hand-Written Index to
Poems,
By J. D. (1633). 161-199.
Richard Todd. Donne's "
Goodfriday,
1613.
Riding Westward.": The Extant Manuscripts and the
Group 1 Stemma. 201-218.
Donald W. Rude. Some Unreported Seventeenth- and
Eighteenth-Century Allusions to John Donne. 219-228.
David Reid. Crashaw's Gallantries. 229-242.
Andrew Sean Davidson. Devotio and
Ratio in Richard Crashaw's "On Hope." 243-262.
George Walton Williams. Richard Crashaw's
"Bulla" and Daniel Heinsius'
Crepundia. 263-273.
Colloquium: "The Sunne Rising"
Ernest W. Sullivan, II, and Robert Shawn Boles. The
Textual History of and Interpretively Significant Variants in
Donne's "The Sunne Rising." 275-280.
Dayton Haskin. Impudently Donne. 281-287.
Meg Lota Brown. Absorbing Difference in Donne's
Malediction Forbidding Morning. 289-292.
VOLUME 21 (2002) SPECIAL ISSUE
In Memoriam Louis Lohr Martz 1913-2001
Edited by Jonathan F. S. Post and R. V. Young
Contents
R. V. Young. Introduction:
The Poetry of
Meditation and the Aesthetics of Devotional Intention.
1-10.
Judith H. Anderson. Donne's Tropic Awareness:
Metaphor, Metonymy, and
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions.
11-34.
Annabel Patterson. A Man is to Himself a
Dioclesian: Donne's Rectified Litany. 35-49.
Dayton Haskin. Is There a Future for Donne's
"Litany"? 51-88.
P. G. Stanwood. The Vision of God in the Sonnets
of John Donne and George Herbert. 89-100.
Jonathan F. S. Post. The Baroque and Elizabeth
Bishop. 101-133.
Robert B. Shaw. "Sometimes Metaphysical": Louis
Martz and Theodore Roethke. 135-149.
Donald M. Friedman. A Caroline Fancy: Carew on
Representation. 151-182.
Sidney Gottlieb. An Collins and the Life of
Writing. 183-207.
Book Reviews
Edward W. Tayler. "differing" Donne. 209-224.
Achsah Guibbory. Sacramental Poetics in an Age
of Controversy. 225-230.
Dennis Flynn. Donne and the Uses of Courtliness:
Trained to Lie? 231-236.
VOLUME 22 (2003)
Contents
Colloquium: "The Good-morrow"
Achsah Guibbory. Reading and Teaching "The
Good Morrow." 1-4.
Lara M. Crowley. Establishing a "fitter" Text of
Donne's "The Good Morrowe." 5-21.
Ilona Bell. Betrothal: "The Good morrow."
23-30.
Jonathan F. S. Post. "The Good Morrow" and the
Modern Aubade: Some Impressions. 31-45.
--------------------------------------------
Albert C. Labriola. "Vile harsh
attire": Biblical Typology in John Donne's "Spit in my face yee
Jewes." 47-57.
Michelle Solomon. Trafique: A
Consideration of John Donne's
The First Anniversary An
Anatomie of the World. 59-75.
Brandon S. Centerwall. "Loe her's a
Man, worthy indeede to travell": Donne's Panegyric upon
Coryats
Crudities. 77-94.
Ernest W. Sullivan, II. What Have
the Donne Variorum Textual Editors Discovered, and Why Should
Anyone Care? 95-107.
Jeffrey Johnson. "One, four, and
infinite": John Donne, Thomas Harriot, and
Essayes in
Divinity. 109-143.
Brooke Conti. Donne, Doubt, and
the
Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions. 145-164.
Peter McCullough. Donne and
Andrewes. 165-201.
Hugh Adlington. Preaching the Holy
Ghost: John Donne's Whitsunday Sermons. 203-228.
Noel Blincoe. Carew's "A Rapture":
A Paradoxical Encomium on Erotic Love. 229-247.
Notes
Andrew Breeze. Donne's "Blest Hermaphrodite" and
Psalms "More Harsh." 249-254.
Donald W. Rude. Seamus Heaney and John Donne: An
Echo of "The Ecstasy" in "Glanmore Sonnet X." 255-257.
Book Review
Jeanne Shami. Approaching Donne's Theology. 259-262.
VOLUME 23 (2004)
Contents
John R. Roberts. John Donne, Never Done: A
Reassessment of Modern Criticism. 1-24.
Tom Cain. Elegy and Autobiography: "The
Bracelet" and the Death of Henry Donne. 25-57.
Judith H. Anderson. Donne's (Im)possible
Punning. 59-68.
Annabel Patterson. Donne's Re-formed
La
Corona. 69-93.
Anthony Low. Absence in Donne's Holy Sonnets:
Between Catholic and Calvinist. 95-115.
Theresa M. DiPasquale. The Feminine Trinity in
"Upon the Annuntiation and Passion." 117-138.
Jeffrey Johnson. Consecrating Lincoln's Inn
Chapel. 139-160.
Sean McDowell. W;t, Donne's Holy
Sonnets, and the Problem of Pain. 161-183.
Emma Rhatigan. Knees and Elephants: Donne
Preaches on Ceremonial Conformity. 185-213.
Clayton D. Lein. Donne, Thomas Myriell, and the
Musicians of St. Paul's. 215-247.
Peter Redford. Correspondence in the Burley
Manuscript: A Conjecture. 249-256.
John N. Wall. John Donne Practices Law: The Case
of the Brentwood School. 257-319.
Clinton A. Brand. Analogies of Sovereignty in
Herbert's "To All Angels and Saints." 321-346.
Lorraine Roberts. Representing a Forsaken Woman:
Crashaw's "Alexias." 347-362.
Book Review
Annabel Patterson. Donne's Sermons Back in
Fashion? 363-370.
--------------------------------------------
Corrigenda. 371-372.
VOLUME 24 (2005) SPECIAL ISSUE
A Special Issue Devoted to Richard Crashaw
Edited by John R. Roberts and R. V. Young
Contents
John R. Roberts. Richard Crashaw: An Annotated
Bibliography of Criticism, 1981-2002. 1-228.
Sean McDowell. From "Lively" Art to "Glitt'ring
Expressions": Crashaw's Initial Reception Reconsidered. 229-262.
Francis Newton. Silius Italicus, Daniel
Heinsius, and Richard Crashaw: The Genesis of Crashaw's Latin Poem
Bulla ("The Bubble"), with a New Edition of the Text.
263-295.
Richard Crashaw. Bubble. Translated by David
Reid. 297-302.
Paul A. Parrish. Front Matters: Crashaw in the
Seventeenth Century. 303-334.
Albert C. Labriola. The "wine of love":
Viticulture in the Poetry of Richard Crashaw. 335-351.
George Walton Williams. Clement Barksdale's
Translations of Richard Crashaw's Epigrams. 353-357.
VOLUME 25 (2006) SPECIAL ISSUE
A Special Issue Devoted to Literature and
Music
Edited by Richard S. Peterson
Contents
Richard S. Peterson. Introduction. 1-2.
Anne Lake Prescott. "Formes of Joy and Art":
Donne, David, and the Power of Music. 3-36.
R. D. S. Jack. Music, Poetry, and Performance at
the Court of James VI. 37-63.
Gavin Alexander. The Musical Sidneys. 65-105.
Elise Bickford Jorgens. A Rhetoric of
Dissonance: Music in
The Merchant of Venice. 107-128.
Lin Kelsey. "Many sorts of music": Musical Genre
in
Twelfth Night and
The Tempest. 129-181.
Byron Adams. "By Season Season'd": Shakespeare
and Vaughan Williams. 183-197.
Linda Phyllis Austern. Words on Music: The Case
of Early Modern England. 199-244.
William Peter Mahrt. Yonge Versus Watson and the
Translation of Italian Madrigals. 245-266.
Christopher R. Wilson. Number and Music in
Campion's Measured Verse. 267-289.
John Morehen. Alleluia: A Question of
Syllabification,
c. 1550-
c. 1625. 291-314.
Paul L. Gaston. George Herbert, the "Hymn
Menders," and the Anglican Hymn Tradition. 315-332.
Stephen M. Buhler. "Soft
Lydian Airs"
Meet "Anthems clear": Intelligibility in Milton, Handel, and Mark
Morris. 333-353.
VOLUME 26 (2007)
Contents
Margaret Maurer. Poetry and Scandal: John
Donne's "A Hymne to the Saynts and to the Marquesse Hamilton."
1-33.
Christopher Martin. Fall and Decline:
Confronting Lyric Gerontophobia in Donne's "The Autumnall." 35-54.
Kirsten Stirling. Lutheran Imagery and Donne's
"Picture of Christ crucified." 55-72.
Sarah Powrie. The Celestial Progress of a
Deathless Soul: Donne's
Second Anniuersarie. 73-101.
Robert Guffey. Parabolic Logic in John Donne's
Sermons. 103-125.
Katrin Ettenhuber. "Take heed what you hear":
Re-reading Donne's Lincoln's Inn Sermons. 127-157.
John N. Wall. Situating Donne's Dedication
Sermon at Lincoln's Inn, 22 May 1623. 159-239.
David M. Schiller. "O false, yet sweet contenting":
John Coprario's Songs for Penelope Rich on the Death of Lord
Mountjoy. 241-268.
More Signs of Donne
Judith Scherer Herz. Tracking the Voiceprint of
Donne. 269-282.
Jonathan F. S. Post. Donne, Discontinuity, and
the Proto-Post Modern: The Case of Anthony Hecht. 283-294.
Raymond-Jean Frontain. Registering Donne's
Voiceprint: Additional Reverberations. 295-312.
Kui Yan. A Glory to Come: John Donne Studies in
China. 313-332.
Helen B. Brooks. A "Re-Vision" of Donne:
Adrienne Rich's "A Valediction Forbidding Mourning." 333-362.
Colloquium: Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions
Kate Gartner Frost. Introduction. 363-364.
Brooke Conti. The
Devotions: Popular
and Critical Reception. 365-372.
R. V. Young. Theology, Doctrine, and Genre in
Devotions
Upon Emergent Occasions. 373-380.
Mary A. Papazian. "No Man [and Nothing] is an
Iland":
Contexts for Donne's "Meditation XVII." 381-385.
Helen Wilcox. "Was I not made to
thinke?":
Teaching the
Devotions and Donne's Literary Practice.
387-399.
Book Reviews
Richard Todd. Fresh Sequencing and Fugitive
Conversation in
The Holy Sonnets. 401-406.
Robert Ellrodt. Revisiting John Donne. 407-419.
Albert C. Labriola. Donne's Visual Culture.
421-426.
Anthony Low. The Desire of the Critic. 427-431.
Emma Rhatigan. Reading the Rhetoric of Donne's
Sermons. 433-436.
R. V. Young. A
Novel Donne. 437-442.
VOLUME 27 (2008)
Contents
Jeffrey Johnson. Donne, imperfect. 1-20.
Victoria Moul. Donne's Horatian Means: Horatian
Hexameter Verse in Donne's
Satyres and
Epistles.
21-48.
Jean R. Brink. Michael Drayton and John Donne.
49-66.
Kirsten Stirling. Dr. Donne's Art Gallery and
the
imago dei. 67-80.
John N. Wall. The Irregular Ordination of John
Donne. 81-102.
Lauren La Torre. Dar la Luz:
Illuminating John Donne's "A nocturnall upon
S. Lucies day, Being the shortest day." 103-120.
Albert C. Labriola. Altered States in Donne's
"The Canonization": Alchemy, Mintage, and Transmutation. 121-130.
Steven W. May. How Ralegh Became a Courtier.
131-140.
Note
Richard S. Peterson. Herbert and Yeats: A
Provocation. 141-144.
Colloquium: "Upon the translation of the Psalmes by Sir Philip Sydney, and the Countesse of Pembroke his Sister"
Dayton Haskin. Introduction. 145-152.
Anne Lake Prescott. Teaching Donne on the Sidney
Psalms. 153-160.
Raymond-Jean Frontain. Donne's "Upon the
translation of the Psalmes" and the Challenge to "Make all this
All." 161-174.
Hannibal Hamlin. Upon Donne's "Upon the
translation of the Psalmes." 175-196.
Gary A. Stringer. Donne's Dedication of the Sidney
Psalter. 197-211.
Book Reviews
Anthony Low. How Tom Eliot Met John Donne.
213-217.
Ted-Larry Pebworth. Documenting the Donne
Explosion. 219-222.
John T. Shawcross. The Mutuality of Body and
Soul. 223-228.
John N. Wall. Creating George Herbert. 229-238.
VOLUME 28 (2009)
Contents
Kate Narveson. Donne the Layman Essaying
Divinity. 1-30.
Kathleen Quiring. "Mourne with some fruit": John
Donne and the Redemptive Power of Religious Melancholy. 31-51.
John T. Shawcross. Penance and Passion
Week: John Donne's Sermon on Psalm 6:6-7, and Charles I.
53-65.
Chanita Goodblatt. An Unpublished Manuscript on
John Donne: Retrospect and Prospect. 67-91.
Paul J. Stapleton. A Priest and a "Queen":
Donne's Epigram "Martial." 93-118.
William M. Russell. "Spell it wrong to read it
right": Crashaw's Assessment of Human Language. 119-145.
Abigail Scherer. Embracing Lucia: Reading Robert
Herrick's "The Vine." 147-158.
Note
Christopher Baker. Bone Lace and Donne's
"bracelet of bright haire about the bone." 159-161.
More Signs of Donne
Margaret Maurer. Conceited
Donne. 163-167.
Judith Scherer Herz. It's All in the
Hearing and the Seeing: Donne, Britten, and Beyond. 169-172.
John Donne and June Wayne. A Gallery of
Words and Images. 173-196.
Helen B. Brooks. Donne's "Break of Day"
and the Female Perspective in June Wayne's Timeless Lithograph.
197-206.
Jonathan F. S. Post. 1590/1950: John Donne, June
Wayne, and Concrete Expressionism. 207-216.
Paul A. Parrish. "Forming new wholes": John
Donne and June Wayne. 217-226.
Ann Hurley and Jebah Baum.
June Wayne and John Donne: Reverse Ekphrasis Exemplified
and Explored. 227-250.
Colloquium: "Valediction of the booke"
Brooke Conti. Introduction. 251-252.
D. Audell Shelburne. Notes and Observations on
the Text of "A Valediction of the Booke." 253-261.
Raymond-Jean Frontain. Donne's "Valediction of
the booke" as a Performative Action. 263-274.
Julie W. Yen. Reading Donne's "Valediction of
the booke." 275-282.
Margaret Downs-Gamble. Marking the "dark eclipses":
Taking Longitude from "Valediction of the Booke" and "Valediction to
his booke." 283-298.
Book Reviews
Steven W. May. Manuscript Love Poems and Libels.
299-303.
Paul A. Parrish. Tradition and Subversion.
305-310.
Christopher Hodgkins. Pastoral Poet. 311-316.
VOLUME 29 (2010)
Contents
Kate Gartner Frost. "Bedded and bedrid":
Severall Steps in Our Sicknes. 1-16.
Erica Longfellow. "the office of a man and wife"
in John Donne's Marriage Sermons. 17-32.
Theresa M. DiPasquale. Donne's Naked Time.
33-44.
Ilona Bell. Oral Sex and Verbal Tricks--John
Donne and Renaissance Sexual Practice. 45-76.
Michael A. Winkelman. Post-Coital
Tristesse,
Prolactin, and Donne's "Farewell to love." 77-95.
Robert W. Reeder. (True) Grief: Filial and
Penitent Mourning in "If faithful souls." 97-113.
Thomas P. Roche, Jr. On Donne's "The
Canonization." 115-132.
Lara Dodds. "poore
Donne was out":
Reading and Writing Donne in the Works of Margaret Cavendish.
133-174.
Richard S. Peterson. The Perennial Herbert. 175-179.
Colloquium: "Resurrection. Imperfect."
Judith Scherer Herz. Introduction. 181-183.
Lara M. Crowley. A Text of "Resurrection.
Imperfect." 185-198.
Raymond-Jean Frontain. Donne's Suns and the
Condition of More. 199-206.
Kirsten Stirling. Absence and Presence in
"Resurrection, imperfect." 207-217.
Book Reviews
R. V. Young. John Donne Overdone? 219-223.
Graham Roebuck. Troping the Furniture. 225-234.
VOLUME 30 (2011)
Contents
Raymond-Jean Frontain. Donne, Salvation, and the
Biblical Basis of Poetic Action. 1-30.
Lara M. Crowley. Donne's Dubia: Reassessing the
Authorship of Six Prose Pieces. 31-49.
Christopher Stone. John Donne and the
Astronomers in
Ignatius his
Conclave. 51-63.
M. Thomas Hester. The Parallax View: Donne's
Second, "inticing" Letter to Sir George More. 65-78.
Sean Davidson. "Stand in the way": Seeking True
Religion in John Donne's
Satyre
III. 79-97.
Luke Taylor. Donne's Unwilled Body. 99-121.
Claire Falck. Purer Spheres: The Space Systems
of Donne's Courtly Epithalamions. 123-155.
Raymond-Jean Frontain. "since that I may know":
Donne and the Biblical Basis of Sexual Knowledge. 157-171.
More Signs of Donne
Alison Knight. Donne and Company on Stage.
173-188.
Paul A. Parrish. John Donne and John Adams.
179-193.
Sean H. McDowell. Making the Present Speak: "The
Extasie" Behind Seamus Heaney's "Chanson d'Aventure." 195-209.
Book Reviews
Anthony Raspa. A Handbook of History and
Hermeneutics. 211-219.
Allison P. Coudert. A Plurality of Religions.
221-224.
R. V. Young. John
Donne in Meditation, Again. 225-230.
Brian
Blackley. "We're on a mission from God." 231-240.
Guillaume
Coatalen. A Mute Queen. 241-247.
VOLUME 31 (2012)
Contents
Clayton D. Lein. Revisiting the Records: Donne
at St. Dunstan's. 1-60.
Dennis Flynn, M. Thomas Hester, and Margaret Maurer. Goodere at Court, 1603-1610: The Early Jacobean Decline of a
Catholic Sympathizer and Its Bearing on Donne's Letters. 61-98.
Daniel Starza Smith. The Poems of Sir Henry
Goodere: A Diplomatic Edition. 99-164.
Mingjun Lu. Chinese Chronology and Donne's
Apologetic Exegesis in
Essayes
in Divinity. 165-201.
Sam Kaufman. Conceiving Bodies, Intertextuality,
and Censorship in
Metempsychosis.
203-262.
Timothy Rosendale. Wrong Turns in "Goodfriday,
1613." 263-282.
Andrew Mattison. Donne, Britten, and the
Honesty of Song. 283-300.
More Signs of Donne
Kalyan Chatterjee. Donne's Love Poetry and
Tagore's Novel
Shesher Kobita.
301-318.
Book Reviews
R. V. Young. John
Donne, St. Augustine, and Charity. 319-324.
William
M. Russell. Rereading Desire. 325-329.
VOLUME 32 (2013)
Contents
Judith H. Anderson. Donne Cooking: Analogy,
Proportion, Authority, and Faith. 1-23.
Graham Roebuck. From Donne to Great Tew. 25-56.
Erin A. McCarthy. Poems,
by J. D. (1635) and the Creation of John Donne's Literary
Biography. 57-85.
Donald R. Dickson. The Text of Donne's Good
Friday Meditation
.
87-106.
Hugh Grady. Donne's
First
Anniversary as Baroque Allegory: Fragmentation,
Idealization, and the Resistance to Unity
.
107-129.
Alan James Hogarth. "no power, no will, no
sense": The End of Motion in Donne's "The Storme" and "The Calme."
131-147.
Caitlin Holmes. Claustrophobic Donne:
Devotions
Upon Emergent Occasions and Early Modern Quarantine.
149-173.
Brent Nelson. Radiant
Donne: A Case for the Digital Archive and the John Donne Society's
Digital Prose Project. 175-200.
Book Reviews
Dennis Flynn. Same Old Same Old
.
201-204.
Kui Yan. Donne's
Elegies Betrayed. 205-219.
Yaakov A. Mascetti. Labyrinthine Language-Games. 221-224.
Emily A. Ransom. From Pew
to Prayer Closet. 225-229.
Meghan Davis-Mercer. The
State of Marlowe Studies. 231-235.
R. V. Young. A Welcome
Edition. 237-240.
--------------------------------------------
Corrigendum. 241.
VOLUME 33 (2014)
Contents
Kate Narveson.How and Why to Love the Ordinary. 1-26.
Dennis Flynn. Donne and Elizabeth, Countess of Huntington, Revisited: The Evidence of Donne’s Letters. 27-61.
Roger Kuin. Sustainable Energy: Philip Sidney and John Donne. 63-93.
Katherine Bootle Attié. Bound to Know, Bound to Love, Bound to Last: Donne’s Forms of Containment. 95-130.
Steven Adam. “I Their Map”: The Poetics of Medieval Mapmaking in John Donne’s “Hymn to God my God, in my Sickness”. 131-164.
Jean E. Graham. “Wo’is me” and “Ah my deare”: Parenthetical Metacommentary in Donne and Herbert. 165-201.
Sean H. McDowell. Editor’s Note: M. Thomas Hester, Donne Scholar Par Excellence. 203-220.
Book Reviews
R. V. Young. English Crashaw? 221-226.
Theresa M. DiPasquale. Substantial Poetics. 227-242.
Daniel Starza Smith. John Donne’s “Mr. W. H.” 243-250.
Kate Narveson. Complicated Confessions. 251-257.
Allison Machlis Meyer. A Critical Coterie. 259-265.