Volume 57 (2012), Issue 4
Toqueville’s Legacy: Towards a Cultural History of Recognition in American Studies. Winfried Fluck (Guest Editor)
Contents
Contents open-access
Articles
Introduction open-access
Page 525 - 531
Lost in a Boudoir of Mirrors open-access
The Pursuit of Recognition in the Biographical War of the Early Republic
Page 533 - 552
Ralph Waldo Emerson and the Dual Economy of Recognition open-access
Page 553 - 580
Cinematic Shocks open-access
Recognition, Aesthetic Experience, and Phenomenology
Page 581 - 602
“Recognition Is a Form of Agreement” open-access
The Workings of Self-Narration in The Catcher in the Rye and Invisible Man
Page 603 - 626
Transcultural Autobiography and the Staging of (Mis)Recognition in Edward Said’s ‘Out of Place’ and Gerald Vizenor’s ‘Interior Landscapes: Autobiographical Myths and Metaphors’ open-access
Page 627 - 642
Narratives of Recognition in Contemporary American Fiction open-access
Edward P. Jones’s ‘The Known World’ and Richard Powers’s ‘The Echo Maker‘
Page 643 - 661
“Freedom, Equality, Beauty for Everyone” open-access
Notes on Fantasizing the Modern Body
Page 663 - 688
Fiction and the Struggle for Recognition open-access
Page 689 - 709