Index of Volume XII - 2005
Volume XII was published as 2 double issues;
Numbers I & II (Spring & Summer) and Numbers III & IV (Fall & Winter)
A Southern Patriot’s Sacrifice: Patriarchal Repositioning in Augusta Jane Evans’s St. Elmo
David Russell
Numbers I & II, Pages 4762
A Young Man’s Insanity in Anteb ellum Virginia: The Case of Dr. Frederick Horner, Jr., 1955-58
James D. Alsop
Numbers III & IV, Pages 93-104
Alley-Young, Gordon
Book ReviewThe Southern Movie Palace: Rise, Fall, and Resurrection
Numbers III & IV, Pages 133-136
Alsop, James D.
A Young Man’s Insanity in Antebellum Virginia: The Case of Dr. Frederick Horner, Jr., 1955-58
Numbers III & IV, Pages 93-104
Bloodworth, Jeff
Book ReviewThe White South and the Red Menace: Segregationists, Anticommunism, and Massive Resistance; 1945-1965
Numbers III & IV, Pages 137-140
Book ReviewBlood & Irony: Southern White Women’s Narratives of the Civil War, 1861-1937
Paul Christian Jones
Numbers III & IV, Pages 141-144
Book ReviewConstructions of Race in Southern Theatre: From Federalism to the Federal Theatre Project
Patrick Murphree
Numbers I & II, Pages 131-134
Book ReviewNew Orleans: The Making of an Urban Landscape
Thomas Ruys Smith
Numbers III & IV, Pages 129-132
Book ReviewRace, Work, and Desire in American Literature, 1860-1930
Cullen, David O’Donald
Numbers I & II, Pages 127-130
Book ReviewThe Southern Movie Palace: Rise, Fall, and Resurrection
Gordon Alley-Young
Numbers III & IV, Pages 133-136
Book ReviewThe Upland South
James D. Lowry, Jr.
Numbers I & II, Pages 123-126
Book ReviewThe White South and the Red Menace: Segregationists, Anticommunism, and Massive Resistance; 1945-1965
Jeff Bloodworth
Numbers III & IV, Pages 137-140
Book ReviewZeb Vance: North Carolina’s Civil War Governor and Gilded Age Political Leader
Chad Morgan
Numbers III & IV, Pages 145-148
Colten, Craig
Environmental Protection in Louisiana: An Historical Paradox
Numbers III & IV, Pages 75-92
Creating a Lost Cause: Prohibition and Confederate Memory in Apalachicola, Florida
Lee L. Willis
Numbers III & IV, Pages 55-74
Cullen, David O’Donald
Book ReviewRace, Work, and Desire in American Literature, 1860-1930
Numbers I & II, Pages 127-130
Environmental Protection in Louisiana: An Historical Paradox
Craig Colten
Numbers III & IV, Pages 75-92
Esplin, Emron
Magic Realism in “Flowering Judas” and the Dual Realities of Katherine Anne Porter’s Time in Mexico
Numbers I & II, Pages 2346
Gee, Karen Richardson
Racial Ambiguity in Jesse Stuart’s Daughter of the Legend
Numbers I & II, Pages 95110
“I Acquit the Author”: Domestic Fictions of Eliza Lucas Pinckney in Frances Leigh Williams’s Plantation Patriot
Emily Smith
Numbers III & IV, Pages 41-54
Janie’s Journey: Zora Neale Hurston’s Framerwork for an Alternative Quest
McMillan, Sally
Numbers I & II, Pages 7994
Jones, Paul Christian
Book ReviewBlood & Irony: Southern White Women’s Narratives of the Civil War, 1861-1937
Numbers III & IV, Pages 141-144
Lohrenz, Otto
Parson, Naturalist, and Loyalist: Thomas Feilde of England and Revolutionary Virginia and New York
Numbers III & IV, Pages 105-128
Lowry, James D., Jr.,
Book ReviewThe Upland South
Numbers I & II, Pages 123-126
Magic Realism in “Flowering Judas” and the Dual Realities of Katherine Anne Porter’s Time in Mexico
Emron Esplin
Numbers I & II, Pages 2346
Malena, Anne
The Role of Translation in New World Studies: The Case of Louisiana
Numbers III & IV, Pages 21-40
McMillan, Sally
Janie’s Journey: Zora Neale Hurston’s Framerwork for an Alternative Quest
Numbers I & II, Pages 7994
Merricks, Corrrena Catlett
“What I Would Have Given Him He Liked Better to Steal”: Sexual Violence in Eudora Welty’s The Robber Bridegroom
Numbers III & IV, Pages 1-20
Millichap, Joseph R.
Rewriting Sleeping Beauty in Caroline Gordon’s “The Petrified Woman”
Numbers I & II, Pages 111-122
Morgan, Chad
Book ReviewZeb Vance: North Carolina’s Civil War Governor and Gilded Age Political Leader
Numbers III & IV, Pages 145-148
Murphree, Patrick
Book ReviewConstructions of Race in Southern Theatre: From Federalism to the Federal Theatre Project
Numbers I & II, Pages 131-134
Narcisi, Lara
“One Spoke for All”: Unity, Individualism, and Faulkner’s Voices that Just Won’t be Ignored
Numbers I & II, Pages 122
Nownes, Nicholas L.
Public Acts and Private Utterances in James Weldon Johnson’s The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man
Numbers I & II, Pages 6378
“One Spoke for All”: Unity, Individualism, and Faulkner’s Voices that Just Won’t be Ignored
Lara Narcisi
Numbers I & II, Pages 122
Parson, Naturalist, and Loyalist: Thomas Feilde of England and Revolutionary Virginia and New York
Otto Lohrenz
Numbers III & IV, Pages 105-128
Public Acts and Private Utterances in James Weldon Johnson’s The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man
Nicholas L. Nownes
Numbers I & II, Pages 6378
Racial Ambiguity in Jesse Stuart’s Daughter of the Legend
Gee, Karen Richardson
Numbers I & II, Pages 9511
Rewriting Sleeping Beauty in Caroline Gordon’s “The Petrified Woman”
Joseph R. Millichap
Numbers I & II, Pages 111-122
The Role of Translation in New World Studies: The Case of Louisiana
Anne Malena
Numbers III & IV, Pages 21-40
Russell, David
A Southern Patriot’s Sacrifice: Patriarchal Repositioning in Augusta Jane Evans’s St. Elmo
Numbers I & II, Pages 4762
Smith, Emily
“I Acquit the Author”: Domestic Fictions of Eliza Lucas Pinckney in Frances Leigh Williams’s Plantation Patriot
Numbers III & IV, Pages 41-54
Smith, Thomas Ruys
Book ReviewNew Orleans: The Making of an Urban Landscape
Numbers III & IV, Pages 129-132
Southerners' Honors
Walther, Eric H.
Numbers III & IV, Pages 129-154
Walther, Eric H.
Southerners' Honors
Numbers III & IV, Pages 129-154
“What I Would Have Given Him He Liked Better to Steal”: Sexual Violence in Eudora Welty’s The Robber Bridegroom
Corrrena Catlett Merricks
Numbers III & IV, Pages 1-20
Willis, Lee L.
Creating a Lost Cause: Prohibition and Confederate Memory in Apalachicola, Florida
Numbers III & IV, Pages 55-74
