To encourage the engagement of graduate students in scholarly production, the "Rocky Mountain Review" is recognizing excellence among our graduate student membership by publishing two papers, first presented at the 2006 RMMLA conference in Tucson, that won the 2006 Davis Award. Both papers are presented in their original versions: not subjected to peer-review but simply edited for publication. We hope that this new feature of our fall issue will inspire graduate students in the humanities to pursue their scholarly efforts and to submit their work at our annual conference.
The Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association, one of six independent regional branches of the Modern Language Association, is a non-profit, professional organization, established in 1947 to promote critical inquiry, teaching, and research in the fields of languages, literatures, and the humanities by holding a convention every fall for the presentation and discussion of research in these and related fields, and by regularly publishing a print and an electronic scholarly journal, the Rocky Mountain Review. Members come from the Rocky Mountain region of the U.S. and Canada, as well as from several other states, provinces and countries.
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Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature
© 2007 Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association