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Founded in 1951, by F. W. Bateson, Essays in Criticism soon achieved world-wide circulation, and is today regarded as one of Britain's most distinguished journals of literary criticism. Essays in Criticism covers the whole field of English Literature from the time of Chaucer to the present day. The journal maintains that originality in interpretation must be allied to the best scholarly standards. Moreover, whilst always pursuing new directions and responding to new developments, Essays in Criticism has kept a balance between the constructive and the sceptical, giving the journal particular value at a time when criticism has become so diversified. In addition to the articles, Essays in Criticism has lengthy and searching book reviews, and the 'Critical Opinion' section offers topical discussion on a wide range of literary issues.

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Volume 52, Number 1, January 2002
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Rears’ and ‘Vices’ in Mansfield Park
pp. 23-35(13)
Author: B. Southam

Sidney's Arcadias and Elizabethan Courtiership
pp. 36-55(20)
Author: J. Gibson

Touching Forms: Tennyson and Aestheticism
pp. 56-75(20)
Author: Angela Leighton

Social Authorship and the Advent of Print
pp. 76-80(5)
Author: M.C. Ford

The Letters of Kingsley Amis
pp. 89-99(11)
Author: William H. Pritchard

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