Teaching Space Place and Literature

About The Book

<p>Space, place and mapping have become key concepts in literary and cultural studies. The transformational effects of postcolonialism, globalization, and the rise of ever more advanced information technologies helped to push space and spatiality into the foreground, as traditional spatial or geographic limits are erased or redrawn. <i>Teaching Space, Place and Literature</i> surveys a broad expanse of literary critical, theoretical, historical territories, as it presents both an introduction to teaching spatial literary studies and an essential guide to scholarly research. Divided into sections on key concepts and issues; teaching strategies; urban spaces; place, race and gender and spatiality, periods and genres, this comprehensive book is the ideal way to approach the teaching of space and place in the humanities classroom.</p> <p>Introduction: The Map and the Study of Literature <strong>Part 1. Key Concepts and Issues </strong>Introduction 1. Space Odyssey: From Place to Lived Space, <em>Gerard van den Heever </em>2. The Nomadic Classroom: Encountering Literary Art through Affective Learning, <em>Christian Beck </em>3. An Interdisciplinary Pedagogy for a Graduate Course in Spatial Studies, <em>Jordan Hill </em>4. Mapping Multiethnic Texts in the Literary Classroom: GIS and Karen Tei Yamashita’s <em>Tropic of Orange, Anastasia Lin </em>5. Teaching Literary Cartographies of Race, Space, Place, and Displacement, <em>Jessica Maucione </em>6. "Out of Doors": Shakespeare and the Forest School Movement,<em> Lynsey McCulloch </em>7. Teaching Victorian Literature through Cartography, <em>Susan E. Cook </em>8. Thinking Geocritically: Teaching Canadian Literature in Treaty 6 Territory, <em>Sarah Wylie Krotz </em><b>Part 2. Representing Space and Place </b>9. Panoramic Perspectives and City Rambles: Teaching Urban Literary Studies, <em>Lieven Ameel </em>10. Modeling Interdisciplinarity: Spaces of Modern Paris through Literature and Design, <em>Andrea Goulet and Eugenie L. Birch </em>11. From Ashes to Phoenix: A Geocritical Approach to Teaching the Literary Landscapes of Eighteenth-Century London, <em>Catharina Loeffler </em>12. Interrogating the Urban Crisis: Teaching Detroit in Literature, <em>Frank D. Rashid </em>13. Place as Palimpsest: Literary Works and Cultural-Political Resistance, <em>Andrea Quaid </em>14. Space, Place, and Gender: Women and Geography in the American Literature Survey, <em>Geneva M. Gano </em>15. "But wither am I wandering?": Gender, Class, and Writing Space in Mary Wollstonecraft’s <em>Letters Written During a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, Kathryn Walchester </em><strong>Part 3. Critical Domains </strong>16. Space and Place in Fictional Storyworlds, <em>Mihai Mindra </em>17. Space, Movement, and Modern Literature, <em>Scott Cohen </em>18. Literature and the Medieval English "Borderland": Teaching the Culture of Identity and Place, <em>Ruth Oldman </em>19. Teaching the Importance of Space and Place: Robert Stepto’s "Ritual Grounds", <em>Wendy Rountree </em>20. Multiple Identities and Imaginative Spatiality in Kipling’s <i>Kim</i> and Rushdie’s <i>Midnight’s Children</i>, <em>Safia Sahli Rejeb </em>21. Teaching Non-Places in British Children’s Fantasy Literature, <em>Hannah Swamidoss </em>22. Key Concepts and the Thriller: Space, Place, and Mapping, <em>Ralph Crane, Lisa Fletcher, and Elizabeth Leane</em></p>
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