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| Notes on Contributors | p. x |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Forms | p. 13 |
| Poetry, Prose, and the Politics of Literary Form | p. 15 |
| The Critical Work of American Literature | p. 29 |
| Women's Worlds in the Nineteenth-Century US Novel | p. 46 |
| The Secularization Narrative and Nineteenth-Century American Literature | p. 61 |
| Literatures of Technology, Technologies of Literature | p. 77... MORE |
| Excluded Middles: Social Inequality in American Literature | p. 93 |
| Narrative Medicine, Biocultures, and the Visualization of Health and Disease | p. 108 |
| Performance Anxieties: The A-Literary Companions of American Literary Studies | p. 125 |
| Drama, Theatre, and Performance before O'Neill | p. 141 |
| Disliking It: American Poetry and American Literary Studies | p. 158 |
| After the New Americanists: The Progress of Romance and the Romance of Progress in American Literary Studies | p. 173 |
| Mass Media-and Literary Culture at the Turn of the Twentieth Century | p. 191 |
| Spaces | p. 209 |
| Cabeza de Vaca, Lope de Oviedo, and Americas Exceptionalism | p. 211 |
| Worlding America: The Hemispheric Text-Network | p. 228 |
| Worlds of Color, Gender, Sexuality, and Labor in Early American Literary History | p. 248 |
| Transatlantic Returns | p. 264 |
| American Literature in Transnational Perspective: The Case of Mark Twain | p. 279 |
| Southern Literary Studies | p. 294 |
| New Regionalisms: US-Caribbean Literary Relations | p. 310 |
| American Literature as Ecosystem: The Examples of Euclides da Cunha and Cormac McCarthy | p. 325 |
| Settler States of Feeling: National Belonging and the Erasure of Native American Presence | p. 342 |
| Tribal Nations and the Other Territories of American Indian Literary History | p. 356 |
| Globalization | p. 373 |
| Practices | p. 387 |
| Democratic Cultures and the First Century of US Literature | p. 389 |
| American Literature and Law | p. 406 |
| Sexuality and American Literary Studies | p. 422 |
| Exquisite Fragility: Human Being in the Aftermath of War | p. 437 |
| The Posthuman Turn: Rewriting Species in Recent American Literature | p. 454 |
| Narrative and Intellectual Disability | p. 469 |
| Reading for Asian American Literature | p. 483 |
| Untangling Genealogy's Tangled Skeins: Alexander Crummell, James McCune Smith, and Nineteenth-Century Black Literary Traditions | p. 500 |
| Speculative Realism and the Postrace Aesthetic in Contemporary American Fiction | p. 517 |
| The New Life of the New Forms: American Literary Studies and the Digital Humanities | p. 532 |
| Index | p. 549 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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).