Introduction, Habib Ajroud; Murdering Mothers: Popular Representations of Women and Crime in Early Modern England, Sandra Clark; Selfhood and Otherness: Bicultural Women’s First Person Narratives Resolving Dualities of Self, Saloua Chérif Essayah; Masculinity in Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited, Mark Lilly; Sexual Metaphors and Changing Models of Science and Rationality, Helen Haste; Revisionism and the Disruption of History in Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights, Muhsin J. al-Musawi; The Significance of Dualities in the fiction of John Updike, Hassine Ben Azouna; Reflections (on Editing Writers’ Letters), Janet Fouli; Duality and Duplicity in Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, Nessima Tarchouna; Flouting the Laws of Duality: Hybridity in Midnight’s Children, Faiçal Marrouki; Arthur and the True Psyco/path: Rewriting the Imaginary Indian in M. T. Kelly’s A Dream Like Mine; J. A. Wainwright; On When Locke’s “Mind Is Reduced to That Freedom in Which It Would Have Acted”: Shelley and the Principle of the “As-If”, Mohamed Lazhar Bouazzi; The Real and the Ideal: America and the Chartist Dream, Anne Murray; Two-Nation Conservatism, Mouhiba Ellouze; Sociolinguistic Dualities in Tunisia: Myth or Reality, Itesh Sachdev and Sarah Lawson.