About this book series

Many of the most significant European writers and literary movements of the modern period have traversed national, linguistic and disciplinary borders. The principal aim of the Palgrave Studies in Modern European Literature book series is to create a forum for work that problematizes these borders, and that seeks to question, through comparative methodologies, the very nature of the modern, the European, and the literary. Specific areas of research that the series supports include European romanticism, realism, the avant-garde, modernism and postmodernism, literary theory, the international reception of European writers, the relations between modern European literature and the other arts, and the impact of other discourses (philosophical, political, psychoanalytic, and scientific) upon that literature. In addition to studies of works written in the major modern European languages (English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish), the series also includes volumes on the literature of Central and Eastern Europe, and on the relation between European and other literatures.

Editorial Board: 
Rachel Bowlby (University College London), 
Karen Leeder (University of Oxford), 
William Marx (Collège de France), 
Marjorie Perloff (Stanford University), 
Jean-Michel Rabaté (University of Pennsylvania), 
Dirk Van Hulle (University of Oxford)
Electronic ISSN
2634-6486
Print ISSN
2634-6478
Series Editor
  • Ben Hutchinson,
  • Shane Weller

Book titles in this series

  1. Pound and Pasolini

    Poetics of Crisis

    Authors:
    • Sean Mark
    • Copyright: 2023

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • Soft cover
    • eBook
  2. Epimodernism

    Six Memos for Literature Today

    Authors:
    • Emmanuel Bouju
    • Copyright: 2023

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • eBook
  3. Modernism and Theology

    Rainer Maria Rilke, T. S. Eliot, Czesław Miłosz

    Authors:
    • Joanna Rzepa
    • Copyright: 2021

    Available Renditions

    • Hard cover
    • Soft cover
    • eBook

Abstracted and indexed in

  1. SCOPUS