New Directions in German-American Studies
It is the purpose of this series to subject the large topic of German-America to new critical scrutiny. It does so as an international collaborative effort among scholars in disciplines ranging from modern languages to political history, from American Studies to anthropology, who present independently conceived publications as part of the larger project. Reimagined as part of multilingual America, the new examinations of the German-American tradition in this series offer not only new approaches to German-American studies, but they also force new thinking about what constitutes German literature and what have been the defining, though too little recognized, multilingual features of American literature."
It is the purpose of this series to subject the large topic of German-America to new critical scrutiny. It does so as an international collaborative effort among scholars in disciplines ranging from modern languages to political history, from American Studies to anthropology, who present independently conceived publications as part of the larger project. Reimagined as part of multilingual America, the new examinations of the German-American tradition in this series offer not only new approaches to German-American studies, but they also force new thinking about what constitutes German literature and what have been the defining, though too little recognized, multilingual features of American literature."
It is the purpose of this series to subject the large topic of German-America to new critical scrutiny. It does so as an international collaborative effort among scholars in disciplines ranging from modern languages to political history, from American Studies to anthropology, who present independently conceived publications as part of the larger project. Reimagined as part of multilingual America, the new examinations of the German-American tradition in this series offer not only new approaches to German-American studies, but they also force new thinking about what constitutes German literature and what have been the defining, though too little recognized, multilingual features of American literature."
Titles
-
New World View
Letters from a German Immigrant Family in Texas (1854–1885)Volume 7©2015 Monographs 154 Pages -
Kuno Francke’s Edition of «The German Classics» (1913–15)
A Critical and Historical OverviewVolume 6©2009 Monographs 303 Pages -
Between Natives and Foreigners
Selected Writings of Karl/Charles Follen (1796–1840)Volume 4©2007 Monographs 480 Pages -
Radical Passion
Ottilie Assing's Reports from America and Letters to Frederick DouglassVolume 1©1999 Textbook 380 Pages