All Posts – Page 359 – Michigan Quarterly Review
Winter 2003 Cover

Winter 2003

This issue of MQR brings together academic essays, high-level journalism, personal narratives, fiction, poetry, and visual art responding to the transformations of Jewish experience in the United States during the last fifty years, and, speculatively, extending into the twenty-first century. It offers writings that respond to the multiplicity of representations, cultural forms, fashionings and refashionings, that have defined the experience of Jews in America and continue to compel debate. These include works by Jews and non-Jews that engage contemporary controversies in the fields of politics, sociocultural dynamics, the arts, and the relation of Jewish life in America to other historical periods, other geographical places.

Winter 2003 Read More »

This issue of MQR brings together academic essays, high-level journalism, personal narratives, fiction, poetry, and visual art responding to the transformations of Jewish experience in the United States during the last fifty years, and, speculatively, extending into the twenty-first century. It offers writings that respond to the multiplicity of representations, cultural forms, fashionings and refashionings, that have defined the experience of Jews in America and continue to compel debate. These include works by Jews and non-Jews that engage contemporary controversies in the fields of politics, sociocultural dynamics, the arts, and the relation of Jewish life in America to other historical periods, other geographical places.

Fall 2002

This issue of MQR brings together academic essays, high-level journalism, personal narratives, fiction, poetry, and visual art responding to the transformations of Jewish experience in the United States during the last fifty years, and, speculatively, extending into the twenty-first century.

Fall 2002 Read More »

This issue of MQR brings together academic essays, high-level journalism, personal narratives, fiction, poetry, and visual art responding to the transformations of Jewish experience in the United States during the last fifty years, and, speculatively, extending into the twenty-first century.

Summer 2002

Essays by Barbara Sjoholm, Lawrence Buell, Edmund White, Hilary Cunningham, and Lucía M. Suárez.

Fiction by Mildred Verba Morris, Alice Mattison, and David Zane.

Poetry by Diane Ackerman, Jim Daniels, Gabriel Spera, Sarah Gorham, Keith Taylor, Anne Stevenson, Wililam Baer, Charles Harper Webb, and Cathleen Calbert.

Summer 2002 Read More »

Essays by Barbara Sjoholm, Lawrence Buell, Edmund White, Hilary Cunningham, and Lucía M. Suárez.

Fiction by Mildred Verba Morris, Alice Mattison, and David Zane.

Poetry by Diane Ackerman, Jim Daniels, Gabriel Spera, Sarah Gorham, Keith Taylor, Anne Stevenson, Wililam Baer, Charles Harper Webb, and Cathleen Calbert.

Spring 2002

Essays by Tobin Siebers, David Haven Blake, Kathryn Rhettl; an interview with Clifford Odets and Robert H. Hethman.

Fiction by Greg Johnson and Lynn Freed.

Poetry by Paisley Rekdal, Timothy Liu, John Greening, and Campbell McGrath.

Spring 2002 Read More »

Essays by Tobin Siebers, David Haven Blake, Kathryn Rhettl; an interview with Clifford Odets and Robert H. Hethman.

Fiction by Greg Johnson and Lynn Freed.

Poetry by Paisley Rekdal, Timothy Liu, John Greening, and Campbell McGrath.

Winter 2002

Essays by David M. Halperin, Josip Novakovich, Marcel Marceau, Karen R. Miller; a conversation with Betty Comden, Adolph Green, and William Baer.

Fiction by Jody Lisberger, Clark Blaise, and Millicent Dillon.

Poetry by Alexander Theroux, Carolyne Wright, Stephen Yenser, Edwin Honig, Mark Jarman, Glenna Holloway, Mike Puican, and Angela Patten.

Winter 2002 Read More »

Essays by David M. Halperin, Josip Novakovich, Marcel Marceau, Karen R. Miller; a conversation with Betty Comden, Adolph Green, and William Baer.

Fiction by Jody Lisberger, Clark Blaise, and Millicent Dillon.

Poetry by Alexander Theroux, Carolyne Wright, Stephen Yenser, Edwin Honig, Mark Jarman, Glenna Holloway, Mike Puican, and Angela Patten.

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