Archive
Our most recent volumes are listed below for reference.
For all past volumes of JNT: Journal of Narrative Theory, please visit Project MUSE.
Volume 54 (2024)
54.2
- Dale Pattison, "Neoliberal Horror: It Follows and the Time of Urban Progress"
- Boris Maslov and Tatiana Nikitina, "Remembering the Odyssey in the 21st Century: Oral Narratives by Common Readers"
- Seolji Han, "'I felt too much like a ghost': The Spectral Aesthetics in Jean Rhys's Voyage in the Dark"
- Qateralnada Melhem, "Reality Awry: Spatial Experiments in Algernon Blackwood's 'The Willows' and Environmental Awareness"
- Michael Sean Bolton, "'Occupied by Exploded Systems': Strategies for Posthuman Narratives"
54.1
- Colin Burnett, "A Poetics of the Popular Film Series: How the James Bond Films Tell Continuing Stories Differently"
- Juan J. Alonzo, "Cinematic Style and the Representation of Violence in Rolando Hinojosa-Smith's Ask a Policeman"
- Mengchen Lang, "Multiple Framings and the Risks of Fictionality: Dissecting Critical Disputes over Lauren Slater's Lying"
- Maria Laura Arce Alvarez, "Queer Narrative Discourse and the Ungendered Narrator in Sara Taylor's The Lauras"
- Paula Martin-Salvan, "Self-Cancelling Narratives: Explicit Unreliability and Authorial (Ir)Responsibility in Toni Morrison's Fiction"
Volume 53 (2023)
53.1 (Winter) "Narratologies of Science"
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- Daniel Aureliano Newman, "Grappling with the Unnarratable: Introduction to Special Issue on Narratologies of Science"
- Eric Morel, Narrating Massive Distribution: Climate Stories from Early American Periodicals to Citizen Science Blogging
- Marco Caracciolo, Rabbit Holes and Butterfly Effects: Narrative Probabilities and Climate Science
- Rhona Trauvitch, Mapping with Fi-Sci: Why and How Fictionality Illuminates Science
- Toon Staes, Reflections on the Unnarratable: Free Will, the Intentional Stance, and a Narrative Model for Emergence
- Pascale M. Manning, Natural Histories and Fictive Discourse: Lyell, Freud, and Narratives of Empirical Witness
- Daniella Gáti, Theorizing Mathematical Narrative through Machine Learning
53.2 (Summer)
- Liwen Zhang, Flirting with Filler in Our Mutual Friend
- Mengi Kang, Jan Alber, Interpreting Timbuktu: An Unnatural Narrative, an Emotional Reading Experience, and a Cognitive Explanation
- Francesca Arnavas, "September didn't know what sort of story she was in": The Hybrid Genres of Uncanny Fairy Tales
- Shilpi Saxena, Diksha Sharma, Emotional Geographies of Belonging in Ravinder Randhawa's Beauty and the Beast
- Sohomjit Ray, Estrangement as Method in Trauma Narratives
53.3 (Fall)
- Drishadwati Bargi, “Why Should My Life Be a Sacrifice to One Man?”: The Paradoxes of Dalit Militancy in Malika Amar Shaikh’s Memoir I Want to Destroy Myself
- Elliott Greene, Immersion and Participation in N.K. Jemisin’s The Broken Earth Trilogy
- Emma Adler, When Doing Won’t Do: Rooting in Life and Literature
- Laurie A. Rodrigues, The Medium and Its Messages: Chris MacNeil’s Characterization in The Exorcist
- Nils Clausson, A “Most Singular Mixture” of Genres: Intellectual Deduction versus Gothic Mystery in Arthur Conan Doyle’s “The Sussex Vampire”
Volume 52 (2022)
52.1 (Winter)
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- Dan Shen, “Naturalistic Covert Progression Behind Complicated Plot: Chopin's A Pair of Silk stockings"
- Marijana Mikic, “Satirical Afrofuturism, Race, and Emotion in George S. Schuyler’s Black No More”
- Mengni Kang, “Disappear into the Material: A Reading of If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler through the Lens of Affect"
- Arun Kumar Pokhrel, “History as Storytelling and Storytelling as History: The Environmental Materiality and Imagination in Waterland’s Bio-Regional Eco-Poetics”
- Don J. Kraemer, “To Each According to Their Needs: Readerly Desire in Rhetorical Poetics and in Jesus’ Son”
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Volume 51 (2021)
51.1 (Winter)
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- Xuan Gong, “Dual Focalization in Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels"
- Chen Edelsburg, “Restorative and Traumatic Interpellations: The Second-Person Address in Salinger’s Works”
- Frederick J. Solinger, “Silencing the Linguistic Other: The Underclass as Noise Pollution in George Lamming’s The Emigrants and Anthony Burgess’s A Clockwork Orange"
- Mike Marais, “Hospitality, Reading, and the Aesthetic of Uncertainty Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist”
- Stephen Weninger, “The Sacred Engine: Myth and Fiction in Snowpiercer”
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51.2 (Summer)
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- Todd Copleand, “Will Ladislaw’s Contextualization: The Function of Epigraphs in George Eliot’s Middlemarch"
- Ann Tso, “Feminine Charms and Horrors in J.G. Ballard’s “The Smile” and Iain Sinclair’s Downriver”
- Monika Fludernik, “Narrating Otium—A Narratology of Leisure?"
- Jeffrey Gonzalez, “Narrative and Cosmopolitan Mobility: Teju Cole’s Open City, Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland, and Global Fiction”
- Sarah Copland, “Truth and Reconciliation and Narrative Ethics, Form, and Politics”
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51.3 (Fall) "New Narrative"
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- Rob Halpern and Robin Tremblay-McGaw, "Introduction: New Narrative"
- Adam Mitts, “Elegiac Citationality in Kevin Killian's 'The Inn of the Red Leaf'”
- David Grundy, “New Narratives in Gabrielle Daniels and Ishmael Houston-Jones"
- Robin Tremblay-McGaw, “Sounding Out: Nathaniel Mackey's Ontological Archive in Fugitive Run”
- Earl Jackson, Jr., “Reading the Writing ‘I’: Intertextual Subjectivity and Textual
Intersubjectivity in Laura Moriarty’s Ultravioleta” - Mary Burger, "'A Failed Saint Turns to Autobiography': Robert Glück’s Margery Kempe”
- Camille Roy, "Pleasure and Purpose in Gail Scott's Heroine"
- Kay Gabriel, "A Xerox of Feeling: Dennis Cooper's Frisk"
- Miranda Mellis, "Equinox"
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Volume 50 (2020)
50.1 (Winter)
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- Paul Bruss, “Introduction: A Short History of JNT”
- Julie Park, “Writing with Pen and Dildo: Libertine Techniques of Eighteenth-Century Narrative”
- Lori Robison, “Harem, Auction Block, and Stage: Sympathy and the Gaze as Object in A Romance of the Republic”
- Ruchi Mundeja, “Rooms Not Quite Their Own: Two Colonial Itinerants, Katherine Mansfield and Jean Rhys, and Narratives of Roomlessness”
- Laurie A. Rodrigues, “The ‘Right-Looking Girl’ in the Raccoon Coat: How to Read a Cliché, Like Franny Glass”
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50.2 (Summer)
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- Erin Amann Holliday-Karre, “Re-imagining Shahrazad: Hanan Al-Shaykh and a Feminism of Difference”
- Galia Benziman, “Dickens, Hard Times, and the Erasure of Female Origins”
- Christopher C. Douglas, “’Sideways-Written Words’: Appropriation of the Eighteenth-Century British It-Narrative in Natsume Seki’s I Am a Cat”
- Stephen Hong Sohn, “Model Minority Terrorist: Post 9/11 Asian American Racial Formation and Brown Peril Narrative Discourse in Mohsin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist”
- Victor Xavier Zarour Zarzar, “Bad Blood: On Culpability and a Metabolic Approach to Elena Ferrante’s My Brilliant Friend”
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50.3 (Fall) "Refugee Literatures"
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- Hadji Bakara, “Introduction: Refugee Literatures”
Jana Schmidt, “An Uncertain Movement: Bertolt Brecht’s Refugee Conversations” - Yasmine Shamma, “’Heaven is Green’: The Ecoglobalism of Refugee Desert Gardens”
- Ian Foster, “This is how we Refugee: Neoliberalism from Haiti to Palestine and the Economics of Refugee Form”
- Ashna Ali, “Ugly Affects: Migritude and Black Mediterranean Counternarratives of Migrant Subjectivity”
- Nasia Anam, “Encampment as Colonization: Theorizing the Representation of Refugee Spaces”
- Khaled Mattawa, Poems
- Hadji Bakara, “Introduction: Refugee Literatures”
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Volume 49 (2019)
49.1 (Winter)
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- Katrina Quinn, “Narrratologies of Autodiegetic Undercover Reportage: Albert Deane Richardson’s The Secret Service”
- Lauren Kuryloski, “‘Black Wimmin Who Pass, Pass into Damnation’: Race, Gender, and the Passing Tradition in Fannie Hurst’s Imitation of Life and Douglas Sirk’s Film Adaptation”
- Muno Abd-Rabbo, “Overlapping Character Variation in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart”
- Molly Clark Hillard, “Never Let Me Go: Cloning, Transplanting, and the Victorian Novel ”
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49.2 (Summer)
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- Sandra M. Leonard, “Borrowed Sins: Oscar Wilde’s Aesthetic Plagiarisms in The Picture of Dorain Gray”
- Paula Martín-Salván, “Community, Scapegoating, and Narrative Structure in Joeseph Conrad’s Under Western Eyes ”
- David Stromberg, “‘A Narrator, But One With Extremely Pressing Personal Needs’: Narrative Drive and Affective Crisis in Salinger’s ‘Seymour; An Introduction'”
- Ignatius Chukwumah, “Rethinking Aristotle’s Hamartia: The Igbo Nigerian Tragic Form in Chibua Achebe’s Fiction”
- Megan Behrent, “Suburban Captivity Narratives: Feminism, Domesticity, and the Liberation of the American Housewife”
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49.3 (Fall) "Bodies, Objects, Agents"
- Holly Dugan and Melissa J. Jones, “Introduction: Bodies/Objects/Agents”
- Michael Lutz, “Poisoned Sight: Race and the Material Phantasm in Othello ”
- Steven Swarbrick, “Object-oriented Disability: The Prosthetic Image in Paradise Lost”
- Samantha Pinto, “Objects of Narrative Desire: An Unnatural History of Fossil Collection and Black Women’s Sexuality”
- Lucas Kwong, “H.P. Lovecraft’s ‘The Call of Cthulhu’ as Radicalizing Assemblage: An Anglo Materialist Nightmare”
- Christine Hume, “Death, Sex, and Nylon”
Volume 48 (2018)
48.1 (Winter)
- Todd Comer, “The Politics of Disability in Octavia Butler’s Kindred”
- Nora Gilbert, “Sex and the Storyworld: Narrativizing Desirability in the Early Films of Fred Astaire”
- Daniel Aureliano Newman, “Nabokov’s Gradual and Dual Blues: Taxonomy, Unreliability, and Ethics in Lolita”
- Teresa Prudente, “Livid Time: Time, Tenses, and Temporal Deixis in Ulysses”
- Hatice Yurttas, “Masquerade in Fingersmith”
48.2 (Summer)
- Sharon Kirsch and Michael Stancliff, “‘How Do You Not Understand a Word?’ Language as Contagion and Cure in Pontypool”
- Wan Li, “Ambiguity as an Aesthetic Strategy: Edgar Allan Poe’s Ambitions for the American Short Story”
- Tison Pugh, “Nintendo’s Queer Narratology: The Legend of Zelda, Mythic Heroes, and the Genders of Gaming”
- Alex Vernon, “Kinetoscope of War: Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried”
- Carol Yang, “A Passage from Adam’s Dream to the Cessation of Desire: A Buddhist Reading of John Keats’s ‘Ode to a Nightingale’”
48.3 (Fall) “Women’s Experimental Forms”
- Rowena Kennedy-Epstein, “Introduction: Let Us Combine”
Georgina Colby, “Feminist Solidarity and Experiment in Kathy Acker’s Early Writings” - Ian Davidson, “Times and spaces never dreamed of in Diane di Prima’s Revolutionary Letters”
- Eric Keenaghan, “The Political Experiment of ‘Pot-Boylers’: Thinking, Feeling, and Romance in Kay Boyle’s Resistance Thriller Avalanche”
- Shelly Eversley, “The Evidence of Things Unseen: Experimental Form as Black Feminist Praxis”
- Alexander Dickow, “The Contemporary Hero in Sylvie Kandé’s Epic of Futurity, La Quête infinie de l’autre rive”
- Leisha Jones, “‘BEING ALONE WITH YOURSELF IS INCREASINGLY UNPOPULAR’: The Electronic Poetry of Jenny Holzer"
Volume 47 (2017)
47.1 (Winter)
- Allison Tharp, “‘There is a secret down here…’: Physical Containment and Social Instruction in Rebecca Harding Davis’s ‘Life in the Iron Mills'”
- Margaret Toth, “Seeing Edith Wharton’s Ghosts: The Alternative Gaze on Page and Screen”
- Ryan Siemers, “‘Eternal, Slithery Penance’: Graham Swift’s Waterland and the Secularization of Confession”
- Chang-Hee Kim, “The Biopolitical Effect of Cold War Containment in a Coming-of-Age Narrative”
- Elif Oztabak Avci, “‘Playing Bad for White Ears’: A Study of the Narratee in Andrea Levy’s The Long Song”
- Rahul K. Gairola and Ashna Ali, “Ambivalence and Security in the Anglo-American Empire: A Critical Dialogue with Professor Homi K. Bhabha”
47.2 (Summer)
- Scott Stroud and Jaishikha Nautiyal, “Embedded Stories and the Use of Ambiguity in Ancient Indian Narratives: Selfshadowing in the Anugītā”
- Ju Young Jin, “Spies in the Third Space: Spy as a Trope for Cultural Emplacement in Chang-rae Lee’s Native Speaker and Kim Young-Ha’s Your Republic is Calling You”
- Dale Pattison, “Domestic Violence: The Narrative Architectures of Michael Haneke’s Funny Games”
- Alexandra Effe, “Coetzee’s Summertime as a Metaleptic Conversation”
- Swaralipi Nandi, “Narrative Ambiguity and the Neoliberal Bildungsroman in Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger”
47.3 (Fall) "Dis/enabling Narratives"
- Eliza Chandler, “Troubled Walking: Storying the In-Between”
- Chris Foss, “‘For the future let those who come to play with me have no hearts’: The Affect of Pity in Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Birthday of the Infanta’”
- Amanda Apgar, “Becoming Narratives: The Entanglement of Ability, Gender, Sexuality, and Time in ‘Special Needs’ Memoir”
- Skye Anicca, “Cripping the Mermaid: A Borderlands Approach to Feminist Disability Studies in Valerie Martin’s ‘Sea Lovers’”
- Evan Chaloupka, “Intersubjectivity and Narrative Technique in Of Mice and Men and ‘Johnny Bear’”