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The ECF editors recognize that people might not be available for this type of work right now,
but do get in touch if u would like to write a book review. Deadlines are very generous.
Email: ecf@mcmaster.ca
Send your name, institution, and topics of interest, please. #18thcentury
If you're working from home and don't have easy access to ECF articles online via an institutional proxy, please email me so that I may help: ecf@mcmaster.ca
If it's only one or two articles, I can send a pdf file directly to you. Just ask. #18thcentury #whatwedo
ECF Spring 2020 (32.2) drops in April, and I cannot stop thinking abt the great articles in that issue:
"Plebeianizing the Female Soldier: Radical Liberty and The Life and Adventures of Mrs. Christian Davies"
by Fraser Easton
#18thcentury #readecf https://t.co/bzNRfGLQUP
While Spring 2020 is not due until April, I cannot stop thinking about the great articles that will run in that issue, including:
"Robinson Crusoe and the Earthy Ground"
by James Robert Wood
#18thcentury #readecf https://t.co/bzNRfGLQUP
Trying something new:
a thread of Jane Austen articles in ECF,
sort of an "instant special issue" from the archives.
First up:
Jane Austen and “Banal Shakespeare,” by Megan Taylor
ECF Volume 27, Number 1, Fall 2014, pp. 105-125
https://t.co/E3vDmn2VdT
#18thcentury #readecf
Great news!
Newest special issue of ECF is now @ProjectMUSE
https://t.co/LjP6C29dAk
ECF 32.1, "Ecological Footprints: Crusoe’s Island and Other Alien Environments"
Special Issue Editor: Robert Markley, University of Illinois
#18thcentury #readecf
A great curse and a great article title:
"Pox on Both Your Houses: The Battle of the Romeos"
by Leslie Ritchie (ECF 27.3-4 (2015)
https://t.co/WAbFljPz6b
#readecf #18thcentury
The ECF archive is stuffed with fascinating #MondayMemories
A curated special issue takes the guess-work out of searching.
The virtual issue on Propaganda is a sure thing:
https://t.co/fgP7Jr2pOj
#readecf #18thcentury
Today is Family Day in Ontario, so the ECF office is closed.
While #18thcentury authors didn't describe a low mood as "the blues," they did write about melancholy:
At Seventeen: Adolescence in Sense and Sensibility
by Shawn Lisa Maurer
https://t.co/ABi6u4BUhQ
ECF 25.4 (2013)
#mondayblues
#readecf #austen #janeausten
Getting another #traveltuesday post in under the wire:
"The Vehicle of the Soul: Motion and Emotion in Vehicular It-Narratives"
by Sara Landreth
https://t.co/8p5OOreH3c
ECF 26.1, 2013
#readecf #18thcentury