Eric Gary Anderson Contributes Chapter to The Oxford Handbook of the Literature of the U.S. South

Associate Professor Eric Gary Anderson has contributed the opening chapter to the Oxford Handbook of Literature of the U.S. South edited by Fred Hobson and Barbara Ladd. Anderson's chapter is titled, "Literary and Textual Histories of the Native South."

The collection was published on February 4th and features 27 essays from a varied collections of scholars in this field.

From the Description on the Oxford University Press Homepage: The Oxford Handbook of the Literature of the U.S. South brings together contemporary views of the literature of the region in a series of chapters employing critical tools not traditionally used in approaching Southern literature. It assumes ideas of the South--global, multicultural, plural: more Souths than South--that would not have been embraced two or three decades ago, and it similarly expands the idea of literature itself. Representative of the current range of activity in the field of Southern literary studies, it challenges earlier views of antebellum Southern literature, as well as, in its discussions of twentieth-century writing, questions the assumption that the Southern Renaissance of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s was the supreme epoch of Southern expression, that writing to which all that had come before had led and by which all that came afterward was judged. As well as canonical Southern writers, it examines Native American literature, Latina/o literature, Asian American as well as African American literatures, Caribbean studies, sexuality studies, the relationship of literature to film, and a number of other topics which are relatively new to the field.