THE STATE OF THE UNIONS
SPECIAL JOINT ISSUE WITH CONFIGURATIONS: PART 1
Front Matter
JLS 10.1 (2017)
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Melissa M. Littlefield & Martin Willis, “Introduction: The State of the Unions.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 1-4 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.01
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Thinking Through Disciplinary History
John Holmes, “Consilience Rebalanced: Edward O. Wilson on Science, the Humanities and the Meaning of Human Existence.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 5-10 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.02
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Laura Otis, “Thirty Years of Interdisciplinary Research: The Future Promise of SLSA.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 11-14 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.03
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Darren N. Wagner & Joanna Wharton, “Literature and Science in Eighteenth-Century Studies: Mountain Gloom or Mountain Glory?”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 15-20 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.04
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Mapping Territories
Derek Lee, “On Anarchy, or What We Talk About When We Talk About Science.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 21-25 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.05
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Jennifer L. Lieberman, “Finding a Place for Technology.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 26-31 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.06
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Kanta Dihal, “On Science Fiction As a Separate Field.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 32-36 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.07
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Ralph O’Connor, “The Meanings of ‘Literature’ and the Place of Modern Scientific Nonfiction in Literature and Science.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 37-45 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.08
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Sally Shuttleworth, “Life in the Zooniverse: Working with Citizen Science.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 46-51 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.09
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Action Items
Susan Merrill Squier, “Extreme Citizen Literature, Science, and the Arts: A Comic Proposal for our Fields.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 52-57 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.10
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Abigail Droge, “Teaching Literature and Science in Silicon Valley.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 58-64 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.11
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Jay A. Labinger, “Where are the Scientists in Literature and Science?”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 65-69 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.12
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Richard Nash, “A Sense of Belonging: The Place of Literature and Science in a More Ecologically Alert Academy.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 70-74 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.13
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Cary Wolfe, “‘Theory,’ the Humanities, and the Sciences: Disciplinary and Institutional Settings.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 75-80 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.14
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Article Reviews
Fani Cettl, Review of Melissa Bailes’ “The Psychologization of Geological Catastrophe in Mary Shelley’s The Last Man.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 81-82 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.15
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Ben De Bruyn, Review of Julie A. Smith’s “Representing Animal Minds in Early Animal Autobiography: Charlotte Tucker’s The Rambles of a Rat and Nineteenth-Century Natural History.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 83-84 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.16
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Roger Ebbaston, Review of Jesse Oak Taylor’s “Tennyson’s Elegy for the Anthropocene: Genre,Form and Species Being.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 85-86 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.17
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Jayne Thomas, Review of Jill Marie Treftz’s “Tennyson’s The Princess and the Culture of Collection.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 87-88 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.18
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Jo Waugh, Review of Ross G. Forman’s “A Parasite For Sore Eyes: Rereading Infection Metaphors in Bram Stoker’s Dracula.”
JLS 10.1 (2017): 89-90 DOI: 10.12929/jls.10.1.19
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