Volume 16, Number 2 and 3. INTERDISCIPLINARY CRITICISM, Essays in Memory of Leonard Manheim. "The essays in this special double issue were commissioned to honor the late Leonard Manheim 1902-1983), founder and editor of Literature and Psychology (1951-1967) and University of Hartford Studies in Literature (1969-1983), teacher, controversialist, and inspiring colleague." Driving in Gainesville, Florida: The Shared and The Individual in literary Response, By Nonnan Holland (pg. 1); The New Discourse of Mass Culture: Magazines in the 1890s, By Richard Ohmann (pg. 16); Interpretive Extremes: The Old Instrument Players and Recent Literary Criticism, By James Winn (pg. 36); From Mannerism to Modernism: The Playful Artifice of Walter Pater, By Paul Barolsky (pg. 47); Philosophy and Poetry: The New Rapprochement, By Carl Rapp (pg. 58); Understanding and Truth in The Two Cultures, By Paul Armstrong (pg. 70); "There Was Meaning in His Look": The Meeting of Pictorial Models in Joyce's "Nausicaa," By Wendy Steiner (pg. 90); Literary Counselors For the Defense: Socrates and Gandhi, By Jean· Pierre Barricelli (pg. 104); Leonard Manheim as a Dickens Critic, By Michael Steig (pg. 111); Contributors (pg. 116).