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The Southern Quarterly 1991 - 1992: Vol 30 Index PDF

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Index to Authors and Titles in Volume XXX “Agrarianism, Female-Style,” by Carol S. Manning. Nos. 2-3, 69-76. Amold, Edwin T. “Naming, Knowing and Nothingness: McCarthy’s Moral Parables.” No. 4, 31-50. Amold, Edwin T., and Dianne C. Luce. “Introduction.” No. 4, 7-9. “Behind Confederate Lines: Sarah Morgan Dawson,” by Clara Juncker. No. 1, 7-18. Bernstein, Elizabeth. “Bread and Race: Communion in Lillian Smith’s Killers of the Dream.” Nos. 2-3, 77-80. “Betty Bivins Edwards’s South: Rooted Loyalties and Converging Opposites,” by Dorothy Joiner. No. 1, 70-77. “Bibliography of the Visual Arts and Architecture in the South, Part IV,” by Judith H. Bonner. No. 1, 101-37. Blackford, L.M. “Recipes in the Culinary Art, Together with Hints on Housewifery.” Nos. 2- 3, 167-81. Bonner, Judith H. “Bibliography of the Visual Arts and Architecture in the South, PartIV.” No. 1, 101-37. “Bread and Race: Communion in Lillian Smith’s Killers of the Dream,” by Elizabeth Bernstein. Nos. 2-3, 77-80. Cheuse, Alan. ““A Note on Landscape in All the Pretty Horses.” No. 4, 140-42. “Clyde Edgerton’s Killer Diller,” by Kenn Robbins. No. 1, 66-69. “Come Eat at My Table: Lives with Recipes,” by Quandra Prettyman. Nos. 2-3, 131-40. “Consumption and Complicity in Sheila Bosworth’s Almost Innocent,” by Susan V. Donaldson. Nos. 2-3, 113-22. “A Contemporary Southern Writer’s Predicament: Removing the Rose-Colored Glasses,” by Eve Shelnutt. No. 1, 52-57. “A Conversation with Clyde Edgerton,” by Kenn Robbins. No. 1, 58-65. “Cooking as Mission and Ministry in Southern Culture: The Nurturers of Clyde Edgerton’s Walking Across Egypt, Fannie Flagg’s Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe and Anne Tyler’s Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant,” by Angeline Godwin Dvorak. Nos. 2- 3, 90-98. “Cormac McCarthy: A Bibliography,” by Dianne C. Luce. No. 4, 143-51. Daugherty, Leo. “Gravers False and True: Blood Meridian as Gnostic Tragedy.” No. 4, 122- 33 “Demythologizing Myth Criticism: Folklife and Modernity in Eudora Welty’s ‘Death of a Traveling Salesman,” by Michael Hoberman. No. 1, 24-34. Donaldson, Susan V. “Consumption and Complicity in Sheila Bosworth’s Almost Innocent.” Nos. 2-3, 113-22. Dvorak, Angeline Godwin. “Cooking as Mission and Ministry in Southern Culture: The Nurturers of Clyde Edgerton’s Walking Across Egypt, Fannie Flagg’s Fried Green Southern Quarterly 30, No. 4, Summer 1992 215 Index to Volume XXX Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe and Anne Tyler's Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant.” Nos. 2-3, 90-98. “Edible Labor,” by Patricia Yaeger. Nos. 2-3, 150-59. “Editor’s Note,” by Stephen Flinn Young. No. 1, 5-6. “Emblem of an Age: The Rich Legacy of L.M. Blackford’s ‘Intellectual Pantry,”” by Patricia M. Gantt. Nos. 2-3, 123-30. Evans, Robley. “‘Or else this were a savage spectacle’: Eating and Troping Souther Culture.” Nos. 2-3, 141-49. “Feeding the Hungry Heart: Food in Beth Henley’s Crimes of the Heart,” by Lou Thompson. Nos. 2-3, 99-102. “The Final Course: Just Des(s)erts,” by Susan J. Leonardi. Nos. 2-3, 161-65. “Food, Landscape and the Feminine in Delta Wedding,” by Louise Westling. Nos. 2-3, 29-40. “Frontier States.” Review essay by Camille Wells. Nos. 2-3, 183-87. Gantt, Patricia M. “Emblem of an Age: The Rich Legacy of L.M. Blackford’s ‘Intellectual Pantry.”” Nos. 2-3, 123-30. German, Norman. “A Private Brinksmanship in Dickey’s ‘Cherrylog Road.’” No. 1, 35-41. Grammer, John M. “A Thing Against Which Time Will Not Prevail: Pastoral and History in Cormac McCarthy’s South.” No. 4, 19-30. “Gravers False and True: Blood Meridian as Gnostic Tragedy,” by Leo Daugherty. No. 4,130- 39. see Groaning tables’ and ‘Spit in the kettles’: Food and Race in the Nineteenth-Century South,” by Mary Titus. Nos. 2-3, 13-21. Gwin, Minrose C. “Sweeping the Kitchen: Revelation and Revolution in Contemporary Southern Women’s Writing.” Nos. 2-3, 54-62. “Harriet Jacobs’s Modest Proposals: Revising Southern Hospitality,” by Anne Bradford Warner. Nos. 2-3, 22-28. Hill, Darlene Reimers. “‘Use To, the Menfolks Would Eat First’: Food and Food Rituals in the Fiction of Bobbie Ann Mason.” Nos. 2-3, 81-89. Hoberman, Michael. “Demythologizing Myth Criticism: Folklife and Modernity in Eudora Welty’s ‘Death of a Traveling Salesman.’” No. 1, 24-34. “The Imprisonment of Sensibility: Suttree,” by Thomas D. Young, Jr. No. 4, 72-92. “Intellectual Repasts’: The Changing Role of Food in Southern Literature,” by Mary Ann Wimsatt. Nos. 2-3, 63-68. “Introduction,” by Edwin T. Amold and Dianne C. Luce. No. 4, 7-9. “Introduction,” by Peggy Whitman Prenshaw. Nos. 2-3, 6-12. Jobe, Steven H. “The Scribbling Farmer.” Review essay. No. 4, 177-82. Joiner, Dorothy. “Betty Bivins Edwards’s South: Rooted Loyalties and Converging Oppo- sites.” No. 1, 70-77. Juncker, Clara. “Behind Confederate Lines: Sarah Morgan Dawson.” No. 1, 7-18. Luce, Dianne C. “Cormac McCarthy: A Bibliography.” No. 4, 143-51. . “McCarthy’s First Screenplay: ‘The Gardener’s Son.’” No. 4, 51-71. Luce, Dianne C., and Edwin T. Arnold. “Introduction.” No. 4, 7-9. Makowsky, Veronica. “‘The Only Hard Part Was the Food’: Recipes for Self-Nurture in Kaye Gibbons’s Novels.” Nos. 2-3, 103-12. Manning, Carol S. “Agrarianism, Female-Style.” Nos. 2-3, 69-76. “McCarthy’s First Screenplay: ‘The Gardener’s Son,’” by Dianne C. Luce. No. 4, 51-71. “Meeting McCarthy,” by Garry Wallace. No. 4, 134-39 Mott, Donald R. “We Shall Overcome.” Review essay. No. 1, 78-82. Southern Quarterly 30, No. 4, Summer 1992 216 Index to Volume XXX “Naming, Knowing and Nothingness: McCarthy's Moral Parables,” by Edwin T. Arnold. No. 4, 31-50. “A Note on Landscape in All the Pretty Horses,” by Alan Cheuse. No. 4, 140-42. “The Only Hard Part Was the Food’: Recipes for Self-Nurture in Kaye Gibbons’s Novels,” by Veronica Makowsky. Nos. 2-3, 103-12. ““Or else this were a savage spectacle’: Eating and Troping Southern Culture,” by Robley Evans. Nos. 2-3, 141-49. Peeples, Scott. “Peter Taylor’s Fictional Memoirs.” No. 1, 42-51. “Peter Taylor’s Fictional Memoirs,” by Scott Peeples. No. 1, 42-51. Prenshaw, Peggy Whitman. “Introduction.” Nos. 2-3, 6-12. Prettyman, Quandra. “Come Eat at My Table: Lives with Recipes.” Nos. 2-3, 131-40. “A Private Brinksmanship in Dickey’s ‘Cherrylog Road,’” by Norman German. No. 1, 35-41. “Proust’s Mother, Food and Contemporary Southern Women’s Fiction,” by Virginia Smith. Nos. 2-3, 41-53. Ragan, David Paul. “Values and Structure in The Orchard Keeper.” No. 4, 10-18. Raper, Porter G. “Southern Identity and Myth in ‘Pondy Woods.” No. 1, 19-23. “Recipes in the Culinary Art, Together with Hints on Housewifery,” by L.M. Blackford. Nos. 2-3, 167-81. Robbins, Kenn. “Clyde Edgerton’s Killer Diller.” No. 1, 66-69. . “A Conversation with Clyde Edgerton.” No. 1, 58-65. “The Scribbling Farmer.” Review essay by Steven H. Jobe. No. 4, 177-82. Sepich, John Emil. “‘What kind of indians was them?’: Some Historical Sources in Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian.” No. 4, 93-110. Shaviro, Steven. “The Very Life of the Darkness: A Reading of Blood Meridian.” No.4, 111- 21. Shelnutt, Eve. “A Contemporary Southern Writer’s Predicament: Removing the Rose-Colored Glasses.” No. 1, 52-57. Smith, Virginia. “Proust’s Mother, Food and Contemporary Southern Women’s Fiction.” Nos. 2-3, 41-53. “Southern Identity and Myth in ‘Pondy Woods,’” by Porter G. Raper.” No. 1, 19-23. “Sweeping the Kitchen: Revelation and Revolution in Contemporary Southern Women’s Writing,” by Minrose C. Gwin. Nos. 2-3, 54-62. “Teaching the Cat to Yawn’: Criticisms of St. Anne.” Review essay by Dawn Trouard. No. 1, 83-89. “A Thing Against Which Time Will Not Prevail: Pastoral and History in Cormac McCarthy’s South,” by John M. Grammer. No. 4, 19-30. Thompson, Lou. “Feeding the Hungry Heart: Food in Beth Henley’s Crimes of the Heart.” Nos. 2-3, 99-102. Titus, Mary. “‘Groaning tables’ and ‘Spit in the kettles’: Food and Race in the Nineteenth- Century South.” Nos. 2-3, 13-21. Trouard, Dawn. ““Teaching the Cat to Yawn’: Criticisms of St. Anne.” Review essay. No. 1, 83-89. “Use To, the Menfolks Would Eat First’: Food and Food Rituals in the Fiction of Bobbie Ann Mason. Nos. 2-3, 81-89. “Values and Structure in The Orchard Keeper,” by David Paul Ragan. No. 4, 10-18. “The Very Life of the Darkness: A Reading of Blood Meridian,” by Steven Shaviro. No.4, 111- 2. Wallace, Garry. “Meeting McCarthy.” No. 4, 134-39. Southern Quarterly 30, No. 4, Summer 1992 217 Index to Volume XXX Warner, Anne Bradford. “Harriet Jacobs’s Modest Proposals: Revising Southern Hospitality.” Nos. 2-3, 22-28. Wells, Camille. “Frontier States.” Review essay. Nos. 2-3, 183-87. “We Shall Overcome.” Review essay by Donald R. Mott. No. 1, 78-82. Westling, Louise. “Food, Landscape and the Feminine in Delta Wedding.” Nos. 2-3, 29-40. “What kind of indians was them?’: Some Historical Sources in Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian,” by John Emil Sepich. No. 4, 93-110. “What Was Southern Literature?” Review essay by Leslie White. No. 4, 167-76. White, Leslie. ““What Was Southern Literature?” Review essay. No. 4, 167-76. Wimsatt, Mary Ann. “‘Intellectual Repasts’: The Changing Role of Food in Southern Literature.” Nos. 2-3, 63-68 Yaeger, Patricia. “Edible Labor.” Nos. 2-3, 150-59. Young, Stephen Flinn. “Editor’s Note.” No. 1, 5-6. Young, Thomas D., Jr. “The Imprisonment of Sensibility: Suttree.” No.4, 72-92. *BOOKS REVIEWED Alexander, Adele Logan. Ambiguous Lives: Free Women of Color in Rural Georgia 1789-1879 (Beth Harrison). No. 4, 189-90. Amesen, Eric. Waterfront Workers of New Orleans: Race, Class and Politics, 1863-1923 (Norman Lederer). No. 1, 140-42. Awkward, Michael. New Essays on Their Eyes Were Watching God (Roger West). No. 4, 196- 97. Bolsterli, Margaret Jones. Born in the Delta: Reflections on the Making of a Southern White Sensibility (Steven Jarvis). Nos. 2-3, 194-95. Calhoun, R.J., ed. Witness to Sorrow: The Antebellum Autobiography of William J. Grayson (James E. Kibler). Nos. 2-3, 192-93. Carpenter, Lucas. John Gould Fletcher and Southern Modernism (Michael Kreyling). No. 4, 190-92. Cofer, Judith Ortiz. The Line of the Sun (K.R. Robbins). Nos. 2-3, 201-03. Dillon, Merton L. Slavery Attacked: Southern Slaves and Their Allies, 1619-1865 (William K. Scarborough). No. 4, 187-89. Doyle, Don H. New Men, New CitiNeew sSo,uth : Atlanta, Nashville, Charleston, Mobile, 1860- 1910 (Edward L. Blake, Jr.). No. 1, 142-44. Drago, Edmund L., ed. Broke by the War: Letters of a Slave Trader (Walter B. Edgar). No. 4, 203-04. Drake, Robert. Amazing Grace (Will Campbell). No. 1, 144-46. Dunbar, Prescott N. The New Orleans Museum of Art: The First Seventy-Five Years (Alex Nyerges). No. 1, 153-54. Flynn, Richard. Randall Jarrell and the Lost World of Childhood (Jennifer Horne). Nos. 2-3, 203-05. Greene, Melissa Fay. Praying for Sheetrock: A Work of Nonfiction (Reginald Abbott). No. 4, 183-84. Gretlund, Jan Nordby, and Karl Heinz Westarp, eds. Walker Percy: Novelist and Philosopher (Ann Ebrecht). Nos. 2-3, 195-97. Gunn, Drewey Wayne. Tennessee Williams: A Bibliography (Philip C. Kolin). No. 4, 192-94. Heilman, Robert Bechtold. The Southern Connection: Essays by Robert Bechtold Heilman (Robert H. Brinkmeyer, Jr.). Nos. 2-3, 190-92. Southern Quarterly 30, No. 4, Summer 1992 218 Index to Volume XXX Humphries, Jefferson, ed. Conversations with Reynolds Price (Gary M.Ciuba). Nos. 2-3, 189- 90. Humphries, Robert L., ed. The Journal of Archibald C. McKinley (Sandra S. Vance). No. 1, 154-55. Jones, Gayl. Liberating Voices: Oral Tradition in African American Literature (Mark Jeffreys). No. 1, 151-53. Kubitschek, Missy Dehn. Claiming the Heritage: African-American Women Novelists and History (Roger West). No. 4, 194-95. Larsen, Lawrence H. The Urban South: A History (L. Brett Lockwood). No. 1, 156-57. Lemay, J.A. Leo. The American Dream of Captain John Smith (Robert D. Amer). No. 4, 197- 99. Lockyer, Judith. Ordered by Words: Language and Narration in the Novels of William Faulkner (Stephen M. Ross). No. 4, 200-03. Machann, Clinton, and William Bedford Clark, eds. Katherine Anne Porter and Texas: An Uneasy Relationship (Lee Emling Harding). No. 4, 185-86. Perry, James R. The Formation of a Society on Virginia’ sE astern Shore, 1615-1655 (J.A. Leo Lemay). No. 4, 199-200. Poston, Ted. The Dark Side of Hopkinsville. Ed. by Kathleen A. Hauke (Norman German). Nos. 2-3, 200-01. Runyon, Randolph Paul. The Braided Dream: Robert Penn Warren’ s Late Poetry (James H. Justus). No. 1, 148-49. Smolla, Rodney A. Jerry Falwell v. Larry Flynt: The First Amendment on Trial (David J. Bodenhamer). No. 1, 139-40. Schweninger, Loren. Black Property Owners in the South, 1790-1915 (Joe W. Trotter). Nos. 2-3, 197-98. Toolan, Michael J. TheS tylistics of Fiction: A Literary-Linguistics Approach (Bill Bolin). Nos. 2-3, 205-07. Toth, Emily. Kate Chopin: A life of the author of The Awakening (Beth Harrison). No. 1, 146- 48. Touart, Paul Baker. Somerset: An Architectural History (Travis C. McDonald, Jr.). Nos. 2- 3, 198-200. Unrue, Darlene Harbour, ed. “This Strange, Old World” and Other Book Reviews by Katherine Anne Porter (Craig Turner). No. 4, 186-87. Watkins, Floyd C., John T. Hiers, and Mary Louise Weaks, eds. Talking With Robert Penn Warren (Hugh Ruppersburg). No. 1, 150-51. *FILMS AND VIDEOS REVIEWED Henson, Robby, prod. and dir. Trouble Behind (Stuart A. Selby). No. 1, 159-60. Stone, Oliver, dir. JFK (Donald R. Mott). No. 4, 205-11. *PERFORMANCE REVIEW Shapiro and Smith (Sally Radell). Arts Festival of Auianta, 14-15 September 1991. Nos. 2-3, 209-10. *Names of reviewers are given in parentheses. Southern Quarterly 30, No. 4, Summer 1992 219 Index to Volume XXX PORTFOLIOS Imboden, Clint U., Jr. “Will Work for Food Series.” No. 1, 91-100. Meade, James W. “From Dante’s /nferno.” No. 4, 153-66. Southern Quarterly 30, No. 4, Summer 1992 220

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