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Oxford Handbook of Nineteenth-Century American Literature [Mīkstie vāki]

Edited by (Dorothy Draheim Professor of English, University of Wisconsin-Madison)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 458 pages, height x width x depth: 175x243x24 mm, weight: 730 g, 12 halftones
  • Sērija : Oxford Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jan-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199355894
  • ISBN-13: 9780199355891
  • Mīkstie vāki
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 458 pages, height x width x depth: 175x243x24 mm, weight: 730 g, 12 halftones
  • Sērija : Oxford Handbooks
  • Izdošanas datums: 23-Jan-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0199355894
  • ISBN-13: 9780199355891
How do we approach the rich field of nineteenth-century American literature? How might we recalibrate the coordinates of critical vision and open up new areas of investigation? To answer such questions, this volume brings together 23 original essays written by leading scholars in American literary studies. By examining specific novels, poems, essays, diaries and other literary examples, the authors confront head-on the implications, scope, and scale of their analysis. The chapters foreground methodological concerns to assess the challenges of transnational perspectives, disability studies, environmental criticism, affect studies, gender analysis, and other cutting-edge approaches. The Oxford Handbook of Nineteenth-Century American Literature is thus both critically incisive and sharply practical, inviting attention to how readers read, how critics critique, and how interpreters interpret. It offers forceful strategies for rethinking protest novels, women's writing, urban literature, slave narratives, and popular fiction, just to name a few of the wide array of topics and genres covered. This volume, rather than surveying established ideas in studies of nineteenth-century American literature, registers what is happening now and anticipates what will shape the field's future.

Recenzijas

The essays are uniformly high in quality, * Melissa J. Homestead, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Modern Language Review *

List of Contributors
ix
Introduction: Shifts, Zigzags, Impacts 1(10)
Russ Castronovo
PART I SHIFTS
1 Antipodean American Geography: Washington Irving's "Globular" Narratives
11(16)
Paul Giles
2 The Art of Chaos: Community and African American Literary Traditions
27(15)
John Ernest
3 Are "American Novels" Novels? Mardi and the Problem of Boring Books
42(17)
Jordan Alexander Stein
4 Reading Race through Disability: Slavery and Agency in Mark Twain's Pudd'nhead Wilson and "Those Extraordinary Twins"
59(22)
Ellen Samuels
5 The Invention of Mexican America
81(16)
Jesse Aleman
6 Creole Kinship: Privacy and the Novel in the New World
97(18)
Nancy Bentley
7 Looking at State Violence: Lucy Parsons, Jose Marti, and Haymarket
115(22)
Shelley Streeby
8 Transatlantic vs. Hemispheric: Toni Morrison's Long Nineteenth Century
137(26)
Anna Brickhouse
PART II ZIGZAGS
9 Temporality, Race, and Empire in Cooper's The Deerslayer: The Beginning of the End
163(16)
Robert S. Levine
10 The Visible and Invisible City: Antebellum Writers and Urban Space
179(18)
Jeffrey Steele
11 Animals and the Formation of Liberal Subjectivity in Nineteenth-Century American Literature
197(20)
Colleen Glenney Boggs
12 Archives of Publishing and Gender: Historical Codes in Literary Analysis
217(18)
Shirley Samuels
13 The Novel as Board Game: Homiletic Identification and Forms of Interactive Narrative
235(17)
Gregory S. Jackson
14 Skepticism in Nineteenth-Century American Literature and Philosophy
252(17)
Maurice S. Lee
15 On the Redundancy of "Transnational American Studies"
269(22)
Jared Hickman
PART III IMPACTS
16 How to Read: Regionalism and the Ladies' Home Journal
291(18)
Travis M. Foster
17 Literature and the News
309(18)
Elisa Tamarkin
18 Reading Minds in the Nineteenth Century
327(16)
Paul Gilmore
19 Making an Example: American Literature as Philosophy
343(15)
Elizabeth Duquette
20 Abolition and Activism: The Present Uses of Literary Criticism
358(18)
James Dawes
21 Whose Protest Novel? Ramona, the Uncle Tom's Cabin of the Indian
376(16)
Susan Gillman
22 Nineteenth-Century American Literature without Nature? Rethinking Environmental Criticism
392(19)
Stephanie Le Menager
23 "Action, Action, Action": Nineteenth-Century Literature for Twenty-First-Century Citizenship?
411(16)
Russ Castronovo
Dana D. Nelson
Index 427
Russ Castronovo is is Dorothy Draheim Professor of English and American Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is the author of Beautiful Democracy: Aesthetics and Anarchy in a Global Era (University of Chicago Press, 2007); Necro Citizenship: Death, Eroticism, and the Public Sphere in the Nineteenth-Century United States (Duke UP, 2001), and Fathering the Nation: American Genealogies of Slavery and Freedom (University of California Press, 1996).