American Literature

Editor in Chief | Editorial Board | Articles and Contributors

Oxford Bibliographies in American Literature is designed to provide authoritative guidance. The scholarly examination of American literature is a popular field of study both in the United States and globally. From postmodern theory to debates about the canon, from slave narratives to comic books, American literature is one of the most active fields in academia today. The field is characterized by the many cultures, religions, and ethnicities that have contributed to the larger American literary tradition over the past 500 years. The study of literature invites trans-disciplinary collaboration with fields as varied as history, cultural studies, politics, and women’s studies making it challenging for students and scholars to stay informed about related areas of study. In addition, a great deal of this work has moved online with the most recent scholarship, research, and statistics appearing in online databases. With advances in online searching and database technologies, researchers and practitioners can easily access library catalogs, bibliographic indexes, and other lists that show thousands of resources that might also be useful to them. In this situation what is most needed is expert guidance. Researchers and practitioners at all levels need tools that help them filter through the proliferation of information sources to material that is reliable and directly relevant to their inquiries.  Oxford Bibliographies in American Literature will offer a trustworthy pathway through the thicket of information overload.

 

Editors in Chief

Jackson R. Bryer is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Maryland, where he taught undergraduate and graduate courses, principally in twentieth-century American fiction and American dramatic literature, for more than four decades. He is the author, co-author, editor, or co-editor of more than 50 books. Among them are Black American Writers: Bibliographical Essays (1978); American Women Writers: Bibliographical Essays (1983); Conversations with Lillian Hellman (1987); Selected Letters of Eugene O’Neill (1988); Sixteen Modern American Authors––Volume 2: A Survey of Research and Criticism Since 1972 (1990); The Heath Anthology of American Literature (1990; 1994; 1998; 2001; 2005; 2009); Lanford Wilson: A Casebook (1994); French Connections: Hemingway and Fitzgerald Abroad (1998); The Actor’s Art: Conversations with Contemporary American Stage Performers (2001); Dear Scott, Dearest Zelda: The Love Letters of F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald (2002); The Facts on File Companion to American Drama (2004; 2009); The Art of the American Musical: Conversations with the Creators (2005); Conversations with August Wilson (2006); The Selected Letters of Thornton Wilder (2008); and Approaches to Teaching Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (2009). He is the co-editor and co-founder of Resources for American Literary Study and co-editor of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Review. He is co-founder and President of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Society, President of the Thornton Wilder Society, former President and current member of the Board of Directors of the Eugene O’Neill Society, and former member of the Board of Directors of the Ernest Hemingway Society and Foundation. He has served on the editorial boards of the South Atlantic Quarterly, the Eugene O’Neill Review, and American Drama.

Paul Lauter is Allan K. and Gwendolyn Miles Smith Professor of Literature at Trinity College. He teaches American literature, specializing in the early 19th century and in contemporary multicultural writing. He is the author of several books including Canons and Contexts (Oxford, 1991) and From Walden Pond to Jurassic Park–The Cultural Work of American Studies (Duke, 2001) , now in its 6th edition and for which Lauter is general editor, represents a successful effort to put canon change into practice. Other recent projects include a co-edited collection called Literature, Class, and Culture (Longman’s, 2001), a volume of Thoreau’s writings for the New Riverside Series (Houghton Mifflin, 2000), and a Blackwell Companion to American Literature and Culture (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010). Lauter served as president of the American Studies Association (USA) and was the 2001 recipient of the annual Jay Hubbell medal for lifetime achievement in American Literary Study awarded by the American Literature Section of the Modern Language Association; and in 2006 of the Bode-Pearson Prize of the American Studies Association for lifetime achievement in American Studies.

STANDING EDITORIAL BOARD

Cornell University
Suffolk University
University of New Mexico
Dartmouth University

FOUNDING EDITORIAL BOARD

Cornell University
Troy University
University of Kansas
Centre for Aboriginal Initiatives
University of California, Irvine
Suffolk University
University of New Mexico
Bryn Mawr College
Dartmouth University

FORTHCOMING ARTICLES

At Launch, August 2012
"American Renaissance"
David Reynolds
CUNY Graduate Center
Adrienne Rich
Cheri Langdell
East Los Angeles College
Allen Ginsberg
Matt Theado
Gardner-Webb University
Anne Bradstreet
Wendy Martin
Danielle Hinrichs
Metropolitan State University
Anne Sexton
Linda Wagner-Martin
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Arthur Miller
Susan Abbotson
Rhode Island College
Beats
Charles Molesworth
Queens College
Charles Waddell Chesnutt
Henry Wonham
University of Oregon
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Gary Scharnhorst
University of New Mexico
Cotton Mather
Reiner Smolinski
Georgia State University
Countee Cullen
Jane Kuenz
University of Southern Maine
Edgar Allan Poe
Richard Kopley
Penn State DuBois
Elizabeth Bishop
Brett Millier
Middlebury College
Ellen Glasgow
Catherine Rainwater
St. Edward's University
Emily Dickinson
Paul Crumbley
Utah State University
Ernest Hemingway
Sara Kosiba
Troy University
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Jackson Bryer
University of Maryland
Gertrude Stein
Kirk Curnutt
Troy University
Great Awakening(s)
Zachary Hutchins
Brigham Young University
H.D. (Hilda Doolittle)
Lara Vetter
UNC Charlotte
Hamlin Garland
Keith Newlin
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Henry David Thoreau
William Rossi
University of Oregon
Herman Melville
Dennis Berthold
Texas A&M University
Imagism
Charles Molesworth
Queens College
Jack London
Jeanne Campbell Reesman
University of Texas at San Antonio
James Baldwin
D. Quentin Miller
Suffolk University
James Weldon Johnson
Michael Nowlin
University of Victoria
Jane Johnston Schoolcraft (Ojibwe)
Robert Dale Parker
University of Illinois
John Smith
William Boelhower
Louisiana State University
John Updike
James Schiff
University of Cincinnati
John Winthrop
Francis Bremer
Millersville University
Jonathan Edwards
Kenneth Minkema
Yale University
Judith Sargent Murray
Bonnie Hurd Smith
Judith Sargent Murray Society
Louise Erdrich (Ojibwe)
Connie Jacobs
San Juan College
Lydia Maria Child
Carolyn Karcher
Temple University
Mark Twain
Laura Skandera Trombley
Pitzer College
Ann Ryan
Mass and Popular Culture
Kinohi Nishikawa
Northwestern University
Native American Oral Literatures
Timothy Powell
University of Pennsylvania
Realism and Naturalism
John Dudley
University of South Dakota
Samson Occom and the Brothertown Indians
Ivy Schweitzer
Dartmouth College
Sarah Orne Jewett
Terry Heller
Coe College
Sentimentalism and Domestic Fiction
Shirley Samuels
Cornell University
Sermons
Joe Fulton
Baylor University
Sylvia Plath
Linda Wagner-Martin
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Tillie Olsen
Panthea Reid
Louisiana State University (former)
Vietnam War Literature
Catherine Calloway
Arkansas State University
Westerns
Nicolas Witschi
Western Michigan University
Willa Cather
Evelyn Funda
Utah State University
William Bradford
David Read
University of Missouri

Spring 2013
Abolitionism
Martha Schoolman
African-American Literature
Maryemma Graham
Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones)
James Smethurst
Asian-American Literatures
James Lee
University of California, Irvine
August Wilson
Sandra Shannon
Benjamin Franklin
David Curtis
Copyright Laws
Melissa Homestead
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Suzanne Clark
Edward Taylor
Karen Rowe
Eugene O'Neill
Jackson Bryer
University of Maryland
Feminism
Deborah Rosenfelt
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Joycelyn Moody
Frederick Douglass
Jeffrey Mack
Gloria Anzaldúa
Ariana Vigil
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Martha Schoolman
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Christoph Irmscher
Indiana University
Indian Removal
Daniel Justice
University of Toronto
Ishmael Reed
Pierre-Damien Mvuyekure
J. Hector St. John de Cre vec ur
Dennis Moore
Florida State University
Latino/a Literatures
Mary Pat Brady
Cornell University
Lillian Hellman
Kelly Reames
Western Kentucky University
Lydia Sigourney
Paul Lauter
Trinity College
Martin Luther King
Cedric Burrows
University of Kansas
Mary Wilkins Freeman
Leah Glasser
Maxine Hong Kingston
Tamara Ho
Modernist Poetry
Matthew Hofer
University of New Mexico
Norman Mailer
Philip Sipiora
Proletarian Literature
Bill Mullen
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Robert Habich
Ball State University
Richard Wright
Jennifer Jensen Wallach
Robert Lowell
Steven Gould Axelrod
UC Riverside
Saul Bellow
Sanford Pinsker
Franklin & Marshall College
Sterling Brown
John Edgar Tidwell
Theodore Dreiser
Gary Totten
North Dakota State University
Transcendentalism
David Robinson
Oregon State University
W.E.B DuBois
Warren J. Carson
Washington Irving
Jeffrey Scraba
William Apess (Pequot)
Bethany Schneider
William Carlos Williams
Ian Copestake
William Faulkner
John Lowe
Louisiana State University
Zora Neale Hurston
Carmaletta Williams
Johnson County Community College

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