جزییات کتاب
Content: Chapter 1 Prologomenal Thinking: Some Possibilities and Limits of Comparative Desire (pages 9–23): Teresa A. ToulouseChapter 2 First Peoples: An Introduction to Early Native American Studies (pages 24–37): Joanna BrooksChapter 3 Toward a Cultural Geography of Colonial American Literatures: Empire, Location, Creolization (pages 38–59): Ralph BauerChapter 4 Textual Investments: Economics and Colonial American Literatures (pages 60–77): Michelle BurnhamChapter 5 The Culture of Colonial America: Theology and Aesthetics (pages 78–93): Paul GilesChapter 6 Teaching the Text of Early American Literature (pages 94–109): Michael P. ClarkChapter 7 Teaching with the New Technology: Three Intriguing Opportunities (pages 110–120): Edward J. GallagherChapter 8 Recovering Precolonial American Literary History: “The Origin of Stories” and the Popol Vuh (pages 123–140): Timothy B. PowellChapter 9 Toltec Mirrors: Europeans and Native Americans in Each Other's Eyes (pages 141–158): Renee BerglandChapter 10 Reading for Indian Resistance (pages 159–173): Bethany Ridgway SchneiderChapter 11 Refocusing New Spain and Spanish Colonization: Malinche, Guadalupe, and Sor Juana (pages 174–194): Electa Arenal and Yolanda Martinez?San MiguelChapter 12 British Colonial Expansion Westwards: Ireland and America (pages 195–219): Andrew HadfieldChapter 13 The French Relation and Its “Hidden” Colonial History (pages 220–240): Sara E. MelzerChapter 14 Visions of the Other in Sixteenth and Seventeenth?Century Writing on Brazil (pages 241–258): Elena Losada SolerChapter 15 New World Ethnography, the Caribbean, and Behn's Oroonoko (pages 259–274): Derek HughesChapter 16 Gendered Voices from Lima and Mexico: Clarinda, Amarilis, and Sor Juana (pages 277–291): Raquel Chang?RodriguezChapter 17 Cleansing Mexican Antiquity: Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz and the loa to The Divine Narcissus (pages 292–305): Viviana Diaz BalseraChapter 18 Hemispheric Americanism: Latin American Exiles and US Revolutionary Writings (pages 306–320): Rodrigo LazoChapter 19 Putting Together the Pieces: Notes on the Eighteenth?Century Literary Imagination (pages 321–335): Douglas AndersonChapter 20 The Transoceanic Emergence of American “Postcolonial” Identities (pages 336–350): Gesa MackenthunChapter 21 The Genres of Exploration and Conquest Literatures (pages 353–368): E. Thomson ShieldsChapter 22 The Conversion Narrative in Early America (pages 369–386): Lisa M. GordisChapter 23 Indigenous Literacies: New England and New Spain (pages 387–401): Hilary E. WyssChapter 24 America's First Mass Media: Preaching and the Protestant Sermon Tradition (pages 402–425): Gregory S. JacksonChapter 25 Neither Here Nor There: Transatlantic Epistolarity in Early America (pages 426–445): Phillip H. RoundChapter 26 True Relations and Critical Fictions: The Case of the Personal Narrative in Colonial American Literatures (pages 446–463): Kathleen DoneganChapter 27 “Cross?Cultural Conversations”: The Captivity Narrative (pages 464–479): Lisa M. LoganChapter 28 Epic, Creoles, and Nation in Spanish America (pages 480–499): Jose Antonio MazzottiChapter 29 Plainness and Paradox: Colonial Tensions in the Early New England Religious Lyric (pages 500–516): Amy M. E. MorrisChapter 30 Captivating Animals: Science and Spectacle in Early American Natural Histories (pages 517–532): Kathryn Napier GrayChapter 31 Challenging Conventional Historiography: The Roaming “I”/Eye in Early Colonial American Eyewitness Accounts (pages 533–550): Jerry M. WilliamsChapter 32 Republican Theatricality and Transatlantic Empire (pages 551–565): Elizabeth Maddock DillonChapter 33 Reading Early American Fiction (pages 566–586): Winfried Fluck