Sian Silyn Roberts teaches English at Queens College, CUNY.

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Description
Introduction: The Gothic Enlightenment Chapter 1. The American Transformation of the British Individual Chapter 2. Captivity, Incorporation, and the Politics of Going Native Chapter 3. A Mind for the Gothic: Common Sense and the Problem of Local Culture Chapter 4. Population and the Limits of Civil Society in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter Chapter 5. Slavery and Gothic Form: Writing Race as the Bio-Novel Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index Acknowledgments
"Readers interested in US intellectual history, political philosophy, and the history of the novel generally or the gothic specifically will be particularly interested in Roberts's study. Her selection and close reading of a wide array of literary texts is engaging, drawing intriguing connections to demonstrate a curious coherence around a set of profound questions about nationhood, selfhood, and citizenship." (Modern Philology) "Silyn Roberts offers a fresh and original approach to the American gothic-one that sheds new light on the cultural work of the early American novel and does so in a transatlantic context." (Elizabeth Maddock Dillon, Northeastern University)