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The English Intelligencer (United Kingdom, 1966–1968) The Glebe (United States, 1913–1914) Glimmer Train (United States, 1990–2019) Grand Street (United States, 1981–2004) The Harvard Monthly (United States, 1885–1917) Horizon (United Kingdom, 1940–1949) Ireland Today (Ireland, 1936–1938) The Lace Curtain (Ireland, 1969–1978)
Jobs that allow workers to use a variety of skills increase workers' internal work motivation. If remote workers are limited in teamwork opportunities and have fewer opportunities to use a variety of skills, [113] they may have lower internal motivation towards their work. Also, perceived social isolation can lead to less motivation.
Articles and notes have included: Surrey and Marot, Livy and Jacobean drama, Virgil in Paradise Lost, Pope's Horace, Fielding on translation, Browning's Agamemnon, and Brecht in English. The journal's remit includes responses to other literatures in the work of English writers, including reception of classical texts; historical and contemporary ...
ELH (English Literary History) is an academic journal established in 1934 at Johns Hopkins University, devoted to the study of major works in the English language, particularly British literature. It covers developments in literature through historical, critical, and theoretical methods. The current senior editor is Jeanne-Marie Jackson.
Reader-response criticism argues that literature should be viewed as a performing art in which each reader creates their own, possibly unique, text-related performance. The approach avoids subjectivity or essentialism in descriptions produced through its recognition that reading is determined by textual and also cultural constraints. [ 3 ]
Fowler, Roger (1981). "Review of Language in Modern Literature: Innovation and Experiment". The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 80 (3): 457– 459. ISSN 0363-6941. JSTOR 27708866. Hauck, Richard Boyd (1981). "Review of Criticism in the Wilderness: The Study of Literature Today, ; Edges of Extremity: Some Problems of Literary Modernism.
As such, Scrutiny was widely read, and Leavis became very influential in 20th century literary criticism in part because he was editor of the journal. [6] After writing many articles for the journal, music critic Wilfrid Mellers appeared on the editorial board of the January 1942 issue, and continued in that position until the December 1948 ...
In linguistics, stance is the way in which speakers position themselves in relation to the ongoing interaction, in terms of evaluation, intentionality, epistemology or social relations. When a speaker describes an object in a way that expresses their attitude or relation to the object, the speaker is taking a stance.