Distinguished Scholar Invited Essay
- The Deplorable Daniel Defoe: His Supposed Ignorance, Immorality, and Lack of Conscious ArtistryMaximillian E. Novak
Features
- Upon a Voyage and no Voyage: Mapping Africa’s Waterways in Defoe’s Captain SingletonRebekah Mitsein
- Robinson Crusoe, “Sudden Joy,” and the Portuguese CaptainGeoffrey Sill
- Crusoe’s Creature ComfortsJeremy Chow
- Martial Manners: Revisiting the Cavalier Mode in Defoe’s Memoirs of a CavalierMáire MacNeill
- Beyond Apology: A Spy Upon the Conjurer and Eliza Haywood’s Attack on CredulitySally Demarest
Reviews
- A History of Eighteenth-Century British Literature, by John RichettiKatherine Ellison
- The Wreckage of Intentions: Projects in British Culture, 1660-1730, by David AlffAaron Hanlon
- Novel Machines: Technology and Narrative Form in Enlightenment Britain, by Joseph DruryChristopher Loar
- Novel Ventures: Fiction and Print Culture in England, 1690-1730, by Leah OrrJohn Richetti
- The Experimental Imagination: Literary Knowledge and Science in the British Enlightenment, by Tita ChicoDanielle Spratt