• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

electronic book review

  • about ebr
  • policies and submissions
  • subscribe
  • Essays
  • Gatherings
  • newsletter
  • login

digital futures of literature, theory, criticism, and the arts

and Susan Daitch

Memory and Oblivion: The Historical Fiction of Rikki Ducornet, Jeanette Winterson, and Susan Daitch

Lisa Joyce critiques the rash of historical fiction by women, circa 1996.

Primary Sidebar

other essays by
Lisa Joyce
“Thorowly” American: Susan Howe’s Guide to Orienteering in the Adirondacks
Everyone An Artist?
Introduction: Waves
Memory and Oblivion: The Historical Fiction of Rikki Ducornet, Jeanette Winterson, and Susan Daitch
Writing as a Woman: Annie Abrahams’ e-writing
writingpostfeminism:
Other Essays in
No items found
I’ll be a postfeminist in a postpatriarchy, or, Can We Really Imagine Life after Feminism?
by Lisa Yaszek
Language rules
Deleuze and Guattari, Cognitive Science, and Feminist Visual Arts: Kiki Smith’s Bodies Without Organs Without Bodies
by Martin Rosenberg
from the archive
Grammalepsy: An Introduction
by John Cayley

Secondary Sidebar

ebr is an online, open access, peer-reviewed journal of critical writing produced and published by the emergent digital literary network.

  • subscribe to ebr
  • machine-writing
  • fictions present
  • first person
  • technocapitalism
  • writing (post)feminism
  • electropoetics
  • internet nation
  • critical ecologies
  • webarts
  • end construction
  • image + narrative
  • music/sound/noise
  • writing under constraint
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Footer

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Electronic Book Review (ebr ) is an online, open access, peer-reviewed journal of critical writing produced and published by the emergent digital literary network.

ISSN: 1553-1139

© 2018
ebr is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.