In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

David Greenham Lecturer in English and American Literature at the University of the West of England, has published a book titled The Resurrection of the Body: The Work of Norman O. Brown (2006), as well as articles on Emerson, Philip Roth, Jane Austen, and William Faulkner. His current research focuses on Emerson and European thought.

Derek Pacheco is Assistant Professor of English at Purdue University. His interests include gender and American transcendentalism; print culture, history of the book studies, and popular culture; and race, class, and gender in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American literature. His book-in-progress, “‘One Great Moral Enterprise’: Literature, Education, and the New England Marketplace, 1830–1845,” examines the literary media and pedagogical strategies adopted by a “transcendental” circle of collaborators, including Horace Mann, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Elizabeth Peabody, Mary Peabody Mann, and Margaret Fuller, as they attempted to carve a niche in the protean realm of the antebellum marketplace.

Albert H. Tricomi is Distinguished Teaching Professor in the Department of English at Binghamton University, SUNY. His publications on Elizabethan-Jacobean drama include paleographical essays, the edited transcription of the Restoration drama Alfrede [End Page 320] or Right Reinthron’d, and Reading Tudor-Stuart Texts through Cultural Historicism; recent scholarship includes “America’s Missionary Evangelicalism in Sinclair Lewis’s The God-Seeker” and “Dialect and Identity in Harriet Jacobs’s Autobiography and Other Slave Narratives.” Professor Tricomi is presently working on a book-length project about missionary evangelicalism in the American novel. [End Page 321]

...

pdf

Share