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{{cite journal |last=Cosma |first=Ioana |date=2018 |title=Resurrecting the World: The Phenomenology of the Gift in Norman Mailer’s “''The Gospel According to the Son''” and in Colm Toibin’s “''The Testament of Mary''” |journal=Philological Studies and Research - Applied Foreign Language Series |volume=|issue=17 |pages=218-224 }}
{{cite journal |last=Cosma |first=Ioana |date=2018 |title=Resurrecting the World: The Phenomenology of the Gift in Norman Mailer’s “''The Gospel According to the Son''” and in Colm Toibin’s “''The Testament of Mary''” |journal=Philological Studies and Research - Applied Foreign Language Series |volume=|issue=17 |pages=218-224 }}
{{cite book |last=Duncan |first=Stephen R. |author-link= |date=2018 |title=The Rebel Cafe: Sex, Race and Politics in Cold War America’s Nightclub Underground |url= |location=E-book |publisher=John Hopkins UP |page= |isbn=}}

Revision as of 02:29, 25 April 2021

Brady, Phillip (2018). "Nothing Attested, Everything Sung". The Mailer Review. 12 (1): 329–335.

Churchwell, Sarah (17 Feb 2018). "Pushing Back: Why It's Time For Women to Rewrite the Story". The Guardian.


Congdon, Brad (2018). Leading with the Chin: Writing American Masculinities in Esquire, 1960-1989. E-book: U of Toronto Press.

Cooper, Rand Richards (8 Jan 2018). "Hot Type". New Yorker.

Cosma, Ioana (2018). "Resurrecting the World: The Phenomenology of the Gift in Norman Mailer's "The Gospel According to the Son" and in Colm Toibin's "The Testament of Mary"". Philological Studies and Research - Applied Foreign Language Series (17): 218–224.

Duncan, Stephen R. (2018). The Rebel Cafe: Sex, Race and Politics in Cold War America’s Nightclub Underground. E-book: John Hopkins UP.