A History of the Literature of the U.S. South: Volume 1
Herausgeber: Stecopoulos, Harilaos
A History of the Literature of the U.S. South: Volume 1
Herausgeber: Stecopoulos, Harilaos
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Drawing on diverse theories and methods, this collective volume emphasizes the multi-ethnic and transnational aspects of southern literature over a four hundred-year period.
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Drawing on diverse theories and methods, this collective volume emphasizes the multi-ethnic and transnational aspects of southern literature over a four hundred-year period.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 466
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 198mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9781108491679
- ISBN-10: 1108491677
- Artikelnr.: 60588945
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 466
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 198mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 771g
- ISBN-13: 9781108491679
- ISBN-10: 1108491677
- Artikelnr.: 60588945
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Introduction. Reconstructing literary history Harilaos Stecopoulos; 1.
Fictions of the native south Melanie Benson Taylor; 2. John Smith and the
English origins of southern exceptionalism Rob McLoone; 3. Plantation and
enlightenment Jennifer Greeson; 4. Geoconfederacy; or, Bartram's Southern
archipelago Monique Allewaert; 5. In the shadow of his office:
architectures of affect in Jefferson's notes on the State of Virginia Laura
Rigal; 6. Shadows of Haiti: racing gender, violence and sentiment in Victor
Séjour, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, and Charles Chesnutt Susan Castillo
Street; 7. 'Midnight bakings' amid starvation: food and aesthetics in the
slave narrative Stephanie Tsank; 8. A calculated fiction: antebellum
plantation romances Katharine Burnett; 9. Maroons and marronage in
antebellum African American literature Sean Gerrity; 10. Everyday literary
culture in the nineteenth century Christopher Hager and Beth Barton
Schweiger; 11.'Fables of the Bloody Shirt': reconstruction and the problem
of national violence Scott Romine; 12. A heritage unique in the ages: the
politics of black southern womanhood in Anna Julia Cooper's a voice from
the south by a black woman from the south Joanna Davis-McElligatt; 13.
Moonlight and magnolias no more: the new plantation tradition and its
respondents Justin Mellette; 14. Women writers and the southern
renaissance; or, the work of gender in literary periodization Jay Watson;
15. Southern geographies and new Negro modernism Thadious Davis; 16. 'A
fine loud grabble and snatch of AAA and WPA': Faulkner, Hurston, Wright,
Bontemps and the depression south Martyn Bone; 17. Provincialism as a
positive good: agrarianism and its afterlives Jon Smith; 18. Faulkner's
untimely fictions John Matthews; 19. Reconsidering Du Bois's 'Central
Text': W. E. B. Du Bois, Sarah Wright, and the problem of the 'Black
Worker' Konstantina Karageorgos; 20. Cultural activism and theater of the
Civil Rights Movement Elizabeth Rodriguez Fielder; 21. Till the hurt
becomes music: gnosticism and improvisation in the poetry of Yusef
Komunyakaa Herman Beavers; 22. Undead sound; or, why southern poetry is not
dead: the undying work of fathers in Natasha Trethewey, Adam Vines, and
Cormac McCarthy Daniel Turner; 23. There is no south: the weird
Plantationocene of Jeff VanderMeer's southern reach trilogy Amy Clukey; 24.
Hurricane Alley: literature of the coastal south in a time of climate
change Valerie Loichot.
Fictions of the native south Melanie Benson Taylor; 2. John Smith and the
English origins of southern exceptionalism Rob McLoone; 3. Plantation and
enlightenment Jennifer Greeson; 4. Geoconfederacy; or, Bartram's Southern
archipelago Monique Allewaert; 5. In the shadow of his office:
architectures of affect in Jefferson's notes on the State of Virginia Laura
Rigal; 6. Shadows of Haiti: racing gender, violence and sentiment in Victor
Séjour, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, and Charles Chesnutt Susan Castillo
Street; 7. 'Midnight bakings' amid starvation: food and aesthetics in the
slave narrative Stephanie Tsank; 8. A calculated fiction: antebellum
plantation romances Katharine Burnett; 9. Maroons and marronage in
antebellum African American literature Sean Gerrity; 10. Everyday literary
culture in the nineteenth century Christopher Hager and Beth Barton
Schweiger; 11.'Fables of the Bloody Shirt': reconstruction and the problem
of national violence Scott Romine; 12. A heritage unique in the ages: the
politics of black southern womanhood in Anna Julia Cooper's a voice from
the south by a black woman from the south Joanna Davis-McElligatt; 13.
Moonlight and magnolias no more: the new plantation tradition and its
respondents Justin Mellette; 14. Women writers and the southern
renaissance; or, the work of gender in literary periodization Jay Watson;
15. Southern geographies and new Negro modernism Thadious Davis; 16. 'A
fine loud grabble and snatch of AAA and WPA': Faulkner, Hurston, Wright,
Bontemps and the depression south Martyn Bone; 17. Provincialism as a
positive good: agrarianism and its afterlives Jon Smith; 18. Faulkner's
untimely fictions John Matthews; 19. Reconsidering Du Bois's 'Central
Text': W. E. B. Du Bois, Sarah Wright, and the problem of the 'Black
Worker' Konstantina Karageorgos; 20. Cultural activism and theater of the
Civil Rights Movement Elizabeth Rodriguez Fielder; 21. Till the hurt
becomes music: gnosticism and improvisation in the poetry of Yusef
Komunyakaa Herman Beavers; 22. Undead sound; or, why southern poetry is not
dead: the undying work of fathers in Natasha Trethewey, Adam Vines, and
Cormac McCarthy Daniel Turner; 23. There is no south: the weird
Plantationocene of Jeff VanderMeer's southern reach trilogy Amy Clukey; 24.
Hurricane Alley: literature of the coastal south in a time of climate
change Valerie Loichot.
Introduction. Reconstructing literary history Harilaos Stecopoulos; 1.
Fictions of the native south Melanie Benson Taylor; 2. John Smith and the
English origins of southern exceptionalism Rob McLoone; 3. Plantation and
enlightenment Jennifer Greeson; 4. Geoconfederacy; or, Bartram's Southern
archipelago Monique Allewaert; 5. In the shadow of his office:
architectures of affect in Jefferson's notes on the State of Virginia Laura
Rigal; 6. Shadows of Haiti: racing gender, violence and sentiment in Victor
Séjour, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, and Charles Chesnutt Susan Castillo
Street; 7. 'Midnight bakings' amid starvation: food and aesthetics in the
slave narrative Stephanie Tsank; 8. A calculated fiction: antebellum
plantation romances Katharine Burnett; 9. Maroons and marronage in
antebellum African American literature Sean Gerrity; 10. Everyday literary
culture in the nineteenth century Christopher Hager and Beth Barton
Schweiger; 11.'Fables of the Bloody Shirt': reconstruction and the problem
of national violence Scott Romine; 12. A heritage unique in the ages: the
politics of black southern womanhood in Anna Julia Cooper's a voice from
the south by a black woman from the south Joanna Davis-McElligatt; 13.
Moonlight and magnolias no more: the new plantation tradition and its
respondents Justin Mellette; 14. Women writers and the southern
renaissance; or, the work of gender in literary periodization Jay Watson;
15. Southern geographies and new Negro modernism Thadious Davis; 16. 'A
fine loud grabble and snatch of AAA and WPA': Faulkner, Hurston, Wright,
Bontemps and the depression south Martyn Bone; 17. Provincialism as a
positive good: agrarianism and its afterlives Jon Smith; 18. Faulkner's
untimely fictions John Matthews; 19. Reconsidering Du Bois's 'Central
Text': W. E. B. Du Bois, Sarah Wright, and the problem of the 'Black
Worker' Konstantina Karageorgos; 20. Cultural activism and theater of the
Civil Rights Movement Elizabeth Rodriguez Fielder; 21. Till the hurt
becomes music: gnosticism and improvisation in the poetry of Yusef
Komunyakaa Herman Beavers; 22. Undead sound; or, why southern poetry is not
dead: the undying work of fathers in Natasha Trethewey, Adam Vines, and
Cormac McCarthy Daniel Turner; 23. There is no south: the weird
Plantationocene of Jeff VanderMeer's southern reach trilogy Amy Clukey; 24.
Hurricane Alley: literature of the coastal south in a time of climate
change Valerie Loichot.
Fictions of the native south Melanie Benson Taylor; 2. John Smith and the
English origins of southern exceptionalism Rob McLoone; 3. Plantation and
enlightenment Jennifer Greeson; 4. Geoconfederacy; or, Bartram's Southern
archipelago Monique Allewaert; 5. In the shadow of his office:
architectures of affect in Jefferson's notes on the State of Virginia Laura
Rigal; 6. Shadows of Haiti: racing gender, violence and sentiment in Victor
Séjour, Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda, and Charles Chesnutt Susan Castillo
Street; 7. 'Midnight bakings' amid starvation: food and aesthetics in the
slave narrative Stephanie Tsank; 8. A calculated fiction: antebellum
plantation romances Katharine Burnett; 9. Maroons and marronage in
antebellum African American literature Sean Gerrity; 10. Everyday literary
culture in the nineteenth century Christopher Hager and Beth Barton
Schweiger; 11.'Fables of the Bloody Shirt': reconstruction and the problem
of national violence Scott Romine; 12. A heritage unique in the ages: the
politics of black southern womanhood in Anna Julia Cooper's a voice from
the south by a black woman from the south Joanna Davis-McElligatt; 13.
Moonlight and magnolias no more: the new plantation tradition and its
respondents Justin Mellette; 14. Women writers and the southern
renaissance; or, the work of gender in literary periodization Jay Watson;
15. Southern geographies and new Negro modernism Thadious Davis; 16. 'A
fine loud grabble and snatch of AAA and WPA': Faulkner, Hurston, Wright,
Bontemps and the depression south Martyn Bone; 17. Provincialism as a
positive good: agrarianism and its afterlives Jon Smith; 18. Faulkner's
untimely fictions John Matthews; 19. Reconsidering Du Bois's 'Central
Text': W. E. B. Du Bois, Sarah Wright, and the problem of the 'Black
Worker' Konstantina Karageorgos; 20. Cultural activism and theater of the
Civil Rights Movement Elizabeth Rodriguez Fielder; 21. Till the hurt
becomes music: gnosticism and improvisation in the poetry of Yusef
Komunyakaa Herman Beavers; 22. Undead sound; or, why southern poetry is not
dead: the undying work of fathers in Natasha Trethewey, Adam Vines, and
Cormac McCarthy Daniel Turner; 23. There is no south: the weird
Plantationocene of Jeff VanderMeer's southern reach trilogy Amy Clukey; 24.
Hurricane Alley: literature of the coastal south in a time of climate
change Valerie Loichot.