Writing the Early Americas
Spanning the broad chronological territory between contact and colonization through the long nineteenth century, this series invites scholarship that amplifies, challenges, and re-grounds the study of literary culture in the U.S. by highlighting the varied spaces, temporal periods, and forms of language of the early Americas.
Series Editors: Anna Brickhouse & Kirsten Silva Gruesz
Titles in this Series

Perceived in Print
Indigenous American and French Ideas of the Other
Sharon V. Salinger

Reckoning with Race in New Worlds
Ruth Hill

Ghosts and Their Hosts
The Colonization of the Invisible World in Early America
Sladja Blažan

Inkface
Othello and White Authority in the Era of Atlantic Slavery
Miles P. Grier

Rumors of Revolution
Song, Sentiment, and Sedition in Colonial Louisiana
Jennifer Tsien

Forms of Relation
Composing Kinship in Colonial Spanish America
Matthew Goldmark

Before American History
Nationalist Mythmaking and Indigenous Dispossession
Christen Mucher

The Sun of Jesús del Monte
A Cuban Antislavery Novel
Andrés Avelino de Orihuela. Translated and edited by David Luis-Brown

Letters from Filadelfia
Early Latino Literature and the Trans-American Elite
Rodrigo Lazo

Sifilografía
A History of the Writerly Pox in the Eighteenth-Century Hispanic World
Juan Carlos González Espitia

The Alchemy of Conquest
Science, Religion, and the Secrets of the New World
Ralph Bauer

Creole Drama
Theatre and Society in Antebellum New Orleans
Juliane Braun