American Studies: Culture, Society & the Arts
The series aims to publish studies of the American achievement in the literary and non-literary arts, of American intellectual history and of American cultural and social history, from the period of discovery to the present. It invites disciplinary pluralism and comparative approaches
extending beyond national boundaries, as well as explorations which work within more conventional frameworks. The series is not confined to a particular critical or theoretical orientation. It welcomes contributions by
scholars working both within and outside the academy and seeks to support work of intellectual independence and imaginative scope. Publications in a variety of formats will be considered: critical, historical and theoretical
studies, essay collections, conference proceedings, annotated editions,
anthologies, as well as work which may cross critical and creative borders.
The series aims to publish studies of the American achievement in the literary and non-literary arts, of American intellectual history and of American cultural and social history, from the period of discovery to the present. It invites disciplinary pluralism and comparative approaches
extending beyond national boundaries, as well as explorations which work within more conventional frameworks. The series is not confined to a particular critical or theoretical orientation. It welcomes contributions by
scholars working both within and outside the academy and seeks to support work of intellectual independence and imaginative scope. Publications in a variety of formats will be considered: critical, historical and theoretical
studies, essay collections, conference proceedings, annotated editions,
anthologies, as well as work which may cross critical and creative borders.
The series aims to publish studies of the American achievement in the literary and non-literary arts, of American intellectual history and of American cultural and social history, from the period of discovery to the present. It invites disciplinary pluralism and comparative approaches
extending beyond national boundaries, as well as explorations which work within more conventional frameworks. The series is not confined to a particular critical or theoretical orientation. It welcomes contributions by
scholars working both within and outside the academy and seeks to support work of intellectual independence and imaginative scope. Publications in a variety of formats will be considered: critical, historical and theoretical
studies, essay collections, conference proceedings, annotated editions,
anthologies, as well as work which may cross critical and creative borders.
Titles
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Sovereign Stories
Aesthetics, Autonomy and Contemporary Native American WritingVolume 8©2014 Monographs 342 Pages -
The Unruly Garden
Robert Duncan and Eric Mottram - Letters and EssaysVolume 6©2007 Others 258 Pages -
Place and Native American Indian History and Culture
Volume 5©2007 Conference proceedings 394 Pages -
Logics of Separation
Exile and Transcendence in Aesthetic ModernityVolume 4©2011 Monographs 432 Pages -
Writing with Light
Words and Photographs in American TextsVolume 3©2010 Edited Collection 287 Pages -
Holding the Line
Selected Essays in American Literature and CultureVolume 1©2010 Edited Collection 352 Pages