1. Introduction --
2. Part I. Culture and History: Chapter 1. Reading in Three Dimensions: Using Material Culture to Teach The House of Mirth and The Age of Innocence --
3. Chapter 2. Getting to Know the Community: Using Raymond Williams's Concept of "Knowable Communities" to Teach Wharton's Summer --
4. Chapter 3. Using Women Reporting War to Teach Edith Wharton's "Writing a War Story": An Added Context for Gendered Writing --
5. Chapter 4. An Argument for Teaching The Marne: A Long Overlooked Example of Wharton's Wartime Writings. --
6. Chapter 5. Historicizing Adaptation: The Age of Innocence in the Context of 1930s Hollywood. --
7. Part II. Wharton and Other Authors: Chapter 1. Survival versus Thriving: Social Mobility in Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth and Edna Ferber's So Big --
8. Chapter 2. Developing Sympathy: Teaching Edith Wharton's Summer with Lynn Nottage's Intimate Apparel --
8. Chapter 3. Teaching Edith Wharton and Henry James in The Netherlands --
9. Part III. Wharton and Critical Lenses: Chapter 1. "Granite Outcroppings but Half-Emerged from the Soil": Using Ethan Frome in a Gateway Course for the English Major --
10. Chapter 2. "We're near each other only if we stay far from each other": Teaching Psychoanalytic Desire in The Age of Innocence --
11. Chapter 3. Social Darwinism, Feminism, and Performative Identity in Wharton's "The Last Asset" --
12. Chapter 4. Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome and the History of Literary Scholarship --
13. Part IV. Wharton and Interdisciplinary Contexts: Chapter 1. Modeling Addiction: Teaching The House of Mirth in the Context of Addiction Studies --
14. Chapter 2. Ecoliteracy and Edith Wharton: The Ecosomatic Paradigm and the Poetics of Paratexts in Ethan Frome --
15. Chapter 3. Teaching Edith Wharton's The Children in The Anarchist Tradition in Literature Course --
16. Part V. Wharton and the World Today: Chapter 1. Wharton Goes Online: Reimagining the Traditional Graduate Seminar --
17. Chapter 2. Students Abroad --
in the Classroom: A Transatlantic Assignment on Wharton's "Roman Fever" --
18. Chapter 3. Slouching toward the Posthuman: Teaching Edith Wharton's Twilight Sleep.
Access no. | Call number | Location | Status |
---|---|---|---|
00856/21 | 813.52 Tea | Online | Available |