Volume 28 (2010), 2 issues per year
Senior Editor:
Associate Editors:
Book Reviews Editor:
Editorial Board:
Walter Adamson (Emory University, USA)
Pierpaolo Antonello (University of Cambridge, UK)
Zygmunt G. Barański (University of Cambridge, UK)
Teodolinda Barolini (Columbia University, USA)
Steven Botterill (University of California at Berkeley, USA)
Joseph A. Buttigieg (University of Notre Dame, USA)
Theodore Cachey (University of Notre Dame)
Michael Caesar (University of Birmingham, UK)
Roberto Dainotto (Duke University, USA)
Antonio Franceschetti (University of Toronto, Canada)
Adalgisa Giorgio (University of Bath, UK)
Hermann Haller (City University of New York Graduate Center, USA)
Charles Klopp (The Ohio State University, USA)
Marcia Landy (University of Pittsburgh, USA)
Giulio Lepschy (University College London, UK)
John Lindon (University College London, UK)
Massimo Lollini (University of Oregon, USA)
Albert N. Mancini (The Ohio State University, USA)
Millicent Marcus (Yale University, USA)
Silvestra Mariniello (University of Montreal, Canada)
Alan O'Leary (University of Leeds, UK)
Graziella Parati (Dartmouth College, USA)
Barbara Spackman (University of Berkeley, USA)
Anthony J. Tamburri (Calandra Institute, Queens College/City University of New York, USA)
New to Maney in 2009 on behalf of the American Association for Italian Studies (AAIS)
Italian Culture, the official publication of the American Association for Italian Studies, is an annual refereed journal. Its interdisciplinary scope reflects the broad and diverse interests of the Association's members, offering subscribers scholarly articles in Italian language, linguistics, history, literature, cinema, politics, philosophy, folklore, popular culture, migration, and the influence of Italy on other cultures. It also includes articles in comparative literature and cultural studies.
Since 2003, Italian Culture's content has run the gamut of Italian literature from "the Origins" through the Renaissance and Vico, to queer studies, feminist writing, ekphrasis, and postcolonial women's writing.
While Italian Culture has paid great attention to topics in modern and contemporary literature, this is by no means its exclusive focus. Italian Culture is a multidisciplinary journal that features articles in other areas, such as politics, Italian Americana, cinema, and philosophy.