Search Constraints
Search Results
Select an image to start the slideshow
Digging Deeper: Gardens in Postbellum Southern U.S. Literature
1 of 15
The Politics and Poetics of Diagnosis in Nineteenth-Century American Literature and Medicine
2 of 15
"Walk Among Us": Moral Panics and the Deinstitutionalization of the Mentally Ill in Popular Culture
3 of 15
Representing a Problem of Modern Mobility: Travel and Imagination
in African American Cultural History, Arts and Letters, ca.
1900-1970
4 of 15
Islands of Memory: The Sea Islands, Black Women Artists, and thePromise of Home
5 of 15
Telling Laughter: Hilarity and Democracy in theNineteenth-Century United States
6 of 15
The American Columbus: Geography, Chronology and the Historical
Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Literature
7 of 15
Reading to the Test: Character, Method, and Complicity in U.S.
Writing from Emerson to Adorno
8 of 15
Mirrors, Monsters, Metaphors: Transgender Rhetorics and Dysphoric
Knowledge
9 of 15
Longing for Longing: Girlhood, Narrative, and Nostalgia in American
Literature for Children and Young Adults
10 of 15
Subjugated Citizenship:
The Politics and Psychology of
Domesticity in
The Street by Ann
Petry, The Dollmaker by Harriet Arnow,
and The Changelings
by Jo Sinclair
11 of 15
"Anchored in Time": The U.S. South as a "Place" of Gendered
Racial Memory in Ernest J. Gaines's Fiction
12 of 15
Imagining a Future South: David Walker's Appeal and
Antebellum American Literature
13 of 15
Racism, Segregation, and Interracial Sex and Intimacy in the
Protest Novels of Chester Himes and Lillian Smith
14 of 15
Homeland (In)security: Terminal Masculinity & the
Specter of 9/11
15 of 15