Founded In    1997
Published   semiannually
Language(s)   English
     

Fields of Interest

 

Literature, Culture

     
ISSN   1362-7902
     
Editorial Board

Managing Editors

Chris Gair, University of Glasgow; Philip Tew, University of Northampton

Advisory Board

Ian F A Bell, Keele; J Drummond Bone, Liverpool; Richard E Brantley, Florida

David Bromwich, Yale; Paul Giles, Oxford; Stephen Greenblatt, Harvard; Anthony Harding, Saskatchewan; Robert Langbaum, Virginia; Robert Lawson-Peebles, Exeter; Susan Manning, Edinburgh; David Murray, Nottingham; Robert D Richardson, Carolina; Fiona Robertson, University of Central England; Jacqueline Tavernier-Courbin, Ottawa; Helen Taylor, Exeter; Robert Weisbuch, Michigan; Tim Youngs, Nottingham Trent

Submission Guidelines and Editorial Policies

Submission Guidelines and/or Editorial Policies: Articles (5000-7000 words) may be submitted in any recognized humanities style (2 copies), but must be edited in conformity with house style after acceptance by two of the Journal’s readers.


     

Symbiosis: a Journal of Anglo-American Literary Relations

SYMBIOSIS is a peer-reviewed Journal indexed by the MLA. It bridges the institutional divide between literatures in English on either side of the Atlantic, a divide recognized by few creative writers. Playing a leading part in the modern revival of transatlantic perspectives, SYMBIOSIS is the only Journal uniquely concerned with studies of literary and cultural relations between the British Isles and the Americas. It publishes articles concerned with all periods of transatlantic relations, since the beginnings of Anglophone America, and representing all theoretical perspectives.

 

» Visit Journal Web Site

October 2005, Vol. 9, No. 2

Mnemohistory: the Archaeological Turn in the Humanities


William Ellery Channing and Lucy Aikin


The Picturesque in Washington Irving’s Sketch Book


Eudora Welty and the Irish


The Early Work of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes


The First English Novel about the American Revolution


Other Issues

April 2005, Vol. 9, No. 1