All Stories

  1. Logics of Disintegration in Lawrence and Huxley
  2. Ishiguro's "<Strange> Rubbish": Style and Sympathy in Never Let Me Go
  3. Elizabeth Bowen’s Mélisande
  4. Naturalism, Realism, and Impressionism
  5. Review essay on two recent books on modern literature and censorship.
  6. Sarah Cole. At the Violet Hour: Modernism and Violence in England and Ireland. Modernist Literature and Culture series. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012. Pp. 400. $65.00 (cloth).
  7. Varieties of Modernist Im/personality
  8. Faith Binckes. Modernism, Magazines, and the British Avant-Garde: Reading Rhythm, 1910–1914. Oxford English Monographs. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010. Pp. 272. $99.00 (cloth).
  9. A Sense of Shock
  10. Introduction
  11. “A Chain of Secret Influences”: Pater’s Disciples
  12. Epilogue: Elizabeth Bowen’s Demolished Moment
  13. “A Sense of Justice”: Ruskin, Whistler, and James
  14. “Fugitive Imaginings”: Art, Nationhood, and George Moore’s Racial Instincts
  15. “Shocks and Surprises”: Conrad, Terrorism, and Languages of Sensation
  16. “Violent Moments of Being”: Woolf, Pater, and Fry
  17. Ford Madox Ford's 1930s fiction
  18. British Modernism and Censorship (review)
  19. Poetry
  20. Collaborations: Henry James and the Poet-Critics
  21. Modernism, Mass Culture, and the Aesthetics of Obscenity (review)
  22. A Sense of Justice: Whistler, Ruskin, James, Impressionism
  23. A Sense of Justice: Whistler, Ruskin, James, Impressionism
  24. Radclyffe Hall, Virginia Woolf, and censorship.