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Re-Mapping the Transnational:
A Dartmouth Series in American Studies
Series Editor: Donald E. Pease
Acquisitions Editor: Richard Pult
he emergence of Transnational American Studies in the wake of the Cold War marks the most significant reconfiguration of American Studies since its inception. The shock waves generated by a newly globalized world order demanded an understanding of America’s embeddedness within global and local processes rather than scholarly reaffirmations of its splendid isolation. The series Re-Mapping the Transnational seeks to foster the cross-national dialogues needed to sustain the vitality of this emergent field. To advance a truly comparativist understanding of this scholarly endeavor, Dartmouth College Press welcomes monographs from scholars both inside and outside the United States.
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Afterlives of Modernism Liberalism, Transnationalism, and Political Critique |
Rowe, John Carlos |
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An American Body | Politic A Deleuzian Approach |
Herzogenrath, Bernd |
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Dwelling in American Dissent, Empire, and Globalization |
Muthyala, John |
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Empire of Liberty Power, Desire, and Freedom |
Bogues, Anthony |
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Horizons of Enchantment Essays in the American Imaginary |
Johannessen, Lene M. |
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The Imaginary and Its Worlds American Studies after the Transnational Turn |
Bieger, Laura, Ramón Saldívar, and Johannes Voelz, eds. |
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A More Conservative Place Intellectual Culture in the Bush Era |
Bové, Paul A. |
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Re-Framing the Transnational Turn in American Studies |
Fluck, Winfried, and Donald E. Pease, John Carlos Rowe, eds. |
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Shock and Awe American Exceptionalism and the Imperatives of the Spectacle in Mark Twains A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthurs Court |
Spanos, William V. |
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Transcendental Resistance The New Americanists and Emerson's Challenge |
Voelz, Johannes |
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