Connotations Vol.31
(2022)
Articles in this issue
- An Introduction to Metagenre with a Postscript on the Journey from Comedy to Tragedy in E. M. Forster's Where Angels Fear to Tread
Burkhard Niederhoff, 31:1-32. - Parodies of Six-Word Stories: A Comic Literary Metagenre1)
David Fishelov, 31:33-55. - Meta-Epic Reflection in Twenty-First-Century Rewritings of Homer, or: The Meta-Epic Novel
Lena Linne, 31:56-84. - The Woman Taken in Adultery: A Literary Perspective on Christ’s Writing in John 8:1-12
Alan Rudrum and Julia Schatz, 31:85-99. - Romance and Metagenre: A Response to Burkhard Niederhoff
Francesca Pierini, 31:100-111. - Forster’s Self-Ironizing in “The Road from Colonus”: A Response to Laura M. White2)
Shenyou Mei, 31:112-125. - Blaming Helen in Twenty-First Century Myth Writing: A Response to Lena Linne
Shelby Judge, 31:126-132. - "That we shall die we know": Historical Fetters and Creative Liberation in William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar3)
Angelika Zirker and Susanne Riecker, 31:133-159. - Tragedy and Trauerspiel: John Webster’s The Duchess of Malfi4)
Anny Crunelle-Vanrigh, 31:160-188.