Book description
A Companion to American Literary Studies
addresses the most provocative questions, subjects, and issues
animating the field. Essays provide readers with the knowledge and
conceptual tools for understanding American literary studies as it is
practiced today, and chart new directions for the future of the subject.
- Offers up-to-date accounts of major new critical approaches to
American literary studies
- Presents state-of-the-art essays on a full range of topics
central to the field
- Essays explore critical and institutional genealogies of the
field, increasingly diverse conceptions of American literary
study, and unprecedented material changes such as the digital
revolution
- A unique anthology in the field, and an essential resource for
libraries, faculty, graduate students, and advanced undergraduates
Caroline F. Levander
is Carlson Professor in the Humanities, Professor of English, and
Director of the Humanities Research Center at Rice University, USA. She
is author of Voices of the Nation: Women and Public Speech in
Nineteenth-Century American Culture and Literature
(1998) and
Cradle
of Liberty: Race, the Child and National Belonging from Thomas
Jefferson to W. E.B. Du Bois
(2006); she is co-editor of The American Child: A Culture Studies Reader
(2003), Hemispheric American Studies
(2008), and Teaching and Studying the Americas
(2010).
Robert S. Levine is Professor of English and Distinguished
Scholar-Teacher at the University of Maryland, USA. He is the author
of Conspiracy and Romance (1989), Martin Delany, Frederick
Douglass, and the Politics of Representative Identity (1997),
and Dislocating Race and Nation (2008); he is also the editor
of a number of volumes, including Martin R. Delany: A Documentary
Reader (2003), The Norton Anthology of American Literature,
1820-1865 (2007), and Hemispheric American Studies (with
Caroline F. Levander, 2008).