In this Issue
Through essays, position papers, and commentaries, along with reviews, interviews, and previously unpublished diaries, letters, and stories, American Literary History surveys the contested field of US culture four times a year. No other scholarly publication offers such a wide-ranging and provocative discussion of critical challenges. American Literary History has become the premier forum for a rich and varied criticism shaping the ways we have come to think about America and setting the agenda of American cultural studies.
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Volume 35, Number 4, Winter 2023Table of Contents
- Character and Conduct
- pp. 1688-1701
- Writing the Indigenous Americas
- pp. 1702-1712
- Childhood Studies and the Politics of Horror
- pp. 1724-1732
- Genre Fiction without Shame
- pp. 1745-1758
- Abolition's Afterlives
- pp. 1760-1767
- The Claims of the Humanitarian, Legally Considered
- pp. 1776-1785
- Climate Activism as the New Abolitionism
- pp. 1817-1824
- You Can Never Be Sure
- pp. 1825-1842
- "Have Sure Tried": Hemingway's Unfaltering Career
- pp. 1843-1862
- Correction
- p. 1903
- The Last Samurai Reread by Lee Konstantinou (review)
- pp. 1992-1995
- Catching the Light by Joy Harjo (review)
- pp. 1996-1998
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