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Recent Americanist scholarship has generated some of the most forceful responses to questions about literary history and theory. Yet too many of the most provocative essays have been scattered among a wide variety of narrowly focused publications. Covering the study of US literature from its origins through the present, American Literary History provides a much-needed forum for the various, often competing voices of contemporary literary inquiry.

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Volume 16, Number 4, 2004
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Culture, US Imperialism, and Globalization
pp. 575-595(21)
Author: Rowe, John Carlos

Class Mimicry in Stephen Crane's City
pp. 596-618(23)
Author: Lawson, Andrew

The Whole(y) Family: Economies of Kinship in the Progressive Era
pp. 619-647(29)
Author: Freeman, Elizabeth

Early Jazz Literature (And Why You Didn't Know)
pp. 648-674(27)
Author: Jerving, Ryan

“The Power of Blackness”: Film Noir and Its Critics
pp. 675-687(13)
Author: Scruggs, Charles

Book History, Sexy Knowledge, and the Challenge of the New Boredom
pp. 688-706(19)
Author: Brown, Matthew P.

Los Angeles Literature: Exiles, Natives, and (Mis)Representation
pp. 707-718(12)
Author: Bryson, J. Scott

Colonial Studies3
pp. 728-757(30)
Authors: White, Ed; Drexler, Michael J.

Free Eudora!
pp. 758-768(11)
Author: Kreyling, Michael

Notes on Contributors
pp. 769-769(1)

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