Teaching Transatlanticism

Purchase Options:

Edinburgh University Press: http://www.euppublishing.com/book/9780748694457

Oxford University Press: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/teaching-transatlanticism-9780748694457?cc=us&lang=en&

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Teaching-Transatlanticism-Resources-Nineteenth-Century-Anglo-American/dp/0748694463


 

Interest in transatlantic literary study has intensified along with an impetus toward global studies pioneered by Paul Giles, Susan Manning, Paul Gilroy, and others.  The long nineteenth century offers a crucial timeframe for transatlantic study, given this era’s radically increasing literacy and mass-circulation print, as well as enhanced transportation and communication systems and the rise of professional authorship.

To provide one foundational resource for teaching  in this dynamic field, Teaching TransatlanticismResources for Teaching Nineteenth-Century Anglo-American Print Culture (Edinburgh UP, 2015) outlines conceptual approaches to transatlanticism and offers practical resources ranging from individual assignment descriptions to full course designs.   The collection of essays by leading scholars and experienced professors from Canada, the UK, and the US is complemented by this website, which makes available appendices material from the collection’s authors (sample assignments, syllabi, teaching ideas, bibliographies, and more). The Teaching Transatlanticism website also invites resource submissions and news about work in the field from other current and future teachers of transatlanticism.

Below is the Table of Contents for Teaching Transatlanticism. Hyperlinks associated with individual chapter titles will take you to relevant online appendices for that essay; those materials are available only online. Hyperlinks for each contributor’s name will take you to an author bio.

Teaching Transatlanticism: Contents

Linda K. Hughes and Sarah R. Robbins
Introduction: Tracing Currents and Joining Conversations
Works Cited
Appendix A
Appendix B

I. Curricular Histories and Key Trends

Christopher Gair
Rewriting the Atlantic: Symbiosis, 1997-2013
Works Cited

Susan M. Griffin
On Not Knowing Any Better
Works Cited
Appendix A
Appendix B

Susan David Bernstein
Transatlantic Networks in the Nineteenth Century
Works Cited

II. Organizing Curriculum through a Transatlantic Lenses

Chris Koenig-Woodyard
Anthologizing and Teaching Transatlantic Literature
Works Cited
Appendix A

Appendix B

Daniel Hack
“Flat Burglary”? A Course on Race, Appropriation, and Transatlantic Print Culture
Works Cited

Alan Rice
Dramatising the Black Atlantic: Live Action Projects in Classrooms
Works Cited
Appendix

III.  Teaching Transatlantic Figures

Kate Flint
The Canadian Transatlantic: Susanna Moodie and Pauline Johnson
Works Cited
Appendix

Marjorie Stone
Frederick Douglass, Maria Weston Chapman, and Harriet Martineau: Atlantic Abolitionist Networks and Transatlanticism’s Binaries
Works Cited

Andrew Taylor
‘How Did you Get Here? And Where Are You Going?’: Transatlantic Literary History, Exile and Textual Traces in Herman Melville’s Israel Potter
Works Cited

Sandra Zagarell
Americans, Abroad:  Reading Portrait of A Lady in a Transatlantic Context
Works Cited

IV. Teaching Genres in Transatlantic Context

Tom F. Wright
Making Anglo-American Oratory Resonate
Works Cited
Appendix

Meredith McGill, Scott, Challener, Isaac Cowell, Bakary Diaby, Lauren Kimball, Michael Monescalchi, and Melissa Parrish 
Genre and Nationality in Nineteenth-Century British and American Poetry
Works Cited
Appendix

Linda Freedman
Prophecy, Poetry and Democracy:  Teaching through the International Lens of the Fortnightly Review
Works Cited
Appendix 

Jennifer Phegley, John Cyril Barton, Kristin Huston, and Jarrod Roark
Teaching Transatlantic Sensations
Works  Cited
Appendix

V.  Envisioning Digital Transatlanticism

Alison Chapman
Transatlantic Mediations:Teaching Victorian Poetry in the New Print Media
Works Cited
Appendix

Erik Simpson
Digital Transatlanticism: An Experience of and Reflections on Undergraduate Research in the Humanities
Works Cited

Tyler Branson
21st-Century Digital Publics and 19th-Century Transatlantic Public Spheres
Works Cited

VI. Afterword

Larisa Asaeli, Rachel Johnston, Molly Leverenz, and Marie Martinez
Looking Forward
Works Cited

Works Cited for the Entire Volume

About the Contributors

Reviews of Teaching Transatlanticism

Leave a reply