Issue 16.2 (Summer 2020)
Special Issue: Victorian Literature in the Age of #MeToo

Guest Edited by Lana L. Dalley and Kellie Holzer

Introduction

Lana L. Dalley and Kellie Holzer, “Victorian Literature in the Age of #MeToo: An Introduction

Articles

Doreen Thierauf, “Guns and Blood: Reading The Tenant of Wildfell Hall in the Age of #MeToo

Anna Feuerstein, “The History of Mary Prince and the Racial Formation of Rape Culture

Douglas Murray, “‘She could not repent her resistance’: Northanger Abbey and the #MeToo
Movement

Ellen Stockstill and Jessica Mele, “#MeToo and Victorian Literature: Reading Against Rape
Culture in the Undergraduate Classroom

Sara Hackenberg, “Victorian ‘Mysterymania’ and #MeToo

Shuhita Bhattacharjee, “‘Not a muscle at my command’: Mesmeric Trance, Consent, and #MeToo in Richard Marsh

Kimberly Cox, “Reading Literary Rape: Hand-Grabbing, #MeToo, and Haptic Reciprocity in
Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century Novels

Rebecca Richardson, “Adapting Thackeray’s Vanity Fair after #MeToo

Miranda Wojciechowski, “Criminal Conversation, Predatory Reading: Consent and Critical
Practice at the Crossways

Marlene Tromp, “Conclusion: What does it take to say ‘Me’ in Victorian Studies? Experiential
Analysis in the Age of #MeToo

Reviews

Ana M. Acosta, review of Jennifer Airey's Religion Around Mary Shelley

Frederick D. King, review of Dustin Friedman's Before Queer Theory: Victorian Aestheticism and the Self

Dustin Friedman, review of Grace Lavery's Quaint, Exquisite: Victorian Aesthetics and the Idea of Japan

Jordan Kistler, review of Elizabeth. D Macaluso's Gender, the New Woman and the Monster

Editors-in-Chief: Stacey Floyd and Melissa Purdue
Reviews Editor: Miriam Burstein
Digital Editor: Anne Reus