
A Companion to the Literatures of Colonial America
by Castillo, Susan; Schweitzer, IvyRent Textbook
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Summary
Author Biography
Ivy Schweitzer is Associate Professor of English at Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, and teaches in the Women's Studies, Comparative Literature and Jewish Studies Programs. She is the author of The Work of Self-Representation: Lyric Poetry in Colonial New England (1991).
Together, they are also the editors of The Literatures of Colonial America: An Anthology (Blackwell Publishing, 2001).
Table of Contents
Notes on Contributors.
Part 1. Issues and Methods.
1. Prologomenal Thinking: Some Possibilities and Limits of Comparative Desire (Teresa A. Toulouse).
2. First Peoples: An introduction to Early Native American Studies (Joanna Brooks).
3. Toward a Cultural Geography of Colonial American Literature: Empire, location, Creolization (Ralph Bauer).
4. Textual Investments: Economics and Colonial American Literatures (Michelle Burnham).
5. The Culture of Colonial America: Theology and Aesthetics (Paul Giles).
6. Teaching the Text of Early American Literature (Michael P. Clark).
7. Teaching with the New Technology: Three Intriguing Opportunities (Edward J. Gallagher).
Part II. New World Encounters.
8. Recovering Precolonial American Literary History: "The Origin of Stories" and the Popol Vuh (Timothy B. Powell).
9. Toltec Mirrors: European and Native Americans in Each Other’s Eyes (Renée Bergland).
10. Reading for Indian Resistance (Bethany Ridgway Schneider).
11. Refocusing New Spain and Spanish Colonization: Malinche, Guadalupe, and Sor Juana (Electa Arenal and Yolanda Martínez-San Miguel).
12. British Colonial Expansion Westwards: Ireland and America (Andrew Hadfield).
13. The French Relation and its "Hidden" Colonial History (Sara E. Melzer).
14. Visions of the Other in Sixteenth and Seventeenth–Century Writing on Brazil (Elena Losada Soler).
15. New World Ethnography, the Caribbean, and Behn’s Oroonoko (Derek Hughes).
Part III. Negotiating Identities.
16. Gendered Voices from Lima and Mexico: Clarinda, Amarilis, and Sor Juana (Raquel Chang-Radríguez).
17. Cleansing Mexican Antiquity: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz and the loa to The Divine narcissus (Viviana Díaz Balsera).
18. Hemispheric Americanism: Latin American Exiles and US Revolutionary Writings (Rodrigo Lazo).
19. Putting Together the Pieces: Notes on the Eighteenth-Century Literary Imagination (Douglas Anderson).
20. The Transoceanic Emergence of American "Postcolonial" Identities (Gesa Mackenthun).
Part IV. Genres and Writers: Cross-Cultural Conversations.
21. The Genres of Exploration and Conquest Literatures (E. Thomson Shields).
22. The Conversion Narrative in Early America (Lisa M. Gordis).
23. Indigenous Literacies: New England and New Spain (Hilary E. Wyss).
24. America’s First Mass Media: Preaching and the Protestant Sermon Tradition (Gregory S. Jackson).
25. Neither Here Not There: Transatlantic Epistolary in Early America (Philip H. Round).
26. True Relations and Critical Fictions: The case of the Personal Narrative in Colonial American Literatures (Kathleen Donegan).
27. "Cross-Cultural Conversations": The captivity Narrative (Lisa M. Logan).
28. Epic, Creoles, and nation in Spanish America (José Antonio Mazzotti).
29. Plainness and Paradox: Colonial Tensions in the Early New England Religious Lyric (Amy M. E. Morris).
30. Captivating Animals: Science and Spectacle in Early American natural Histories (Kathryn Napier Gray).
31. Challenging Conventional Historiography: The Roaming "I"/Eye in Early Colonial American Eyewitness Accounts (Jerry M. Williams).
32. Republican Theatricaity and Transatlantic Empire (Elizabeth Maddock Dillon).
33. Reading Early American Fiction (Winfried Fluck).
Index.
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