Philipp Löffler: Introduction: The practices of reading and the need for literary value
I - Periodization, prestige, genre
Clemens Spahr: Literary history and the problem of periodization
II - Classics in the classroom
Peter Paul Schnierer: Shakespeare's complete works: Canonization, completion, and collection in the 21st century
III - In the name of diversity
Franziska Schmid: Sherman Alexie and the uses of Native American literature
IV - Lost figures, unlikely revivals, newcomers
Stefanie Schäfer: John Neal and the problem of romanticism
Günter Leypoldt: Singularity and the literary market
Michael Basseler: Literary value and the question of generic change
Johannes Völz: The uses of Emerson : transcendentalism, transnationalism, and the new Americanists
Heiko Jakubzik: Edgar Allan Poe and the rise of detective fiction
Sascha Pöhlmann: Canon fodder: Thomas Pynchon and the invention of postmodernism
Katharina Gerund: African-American literature, canonization, and the Nobel Prize: German and American perspectives on Toni Morrison
Caroline Lusin: Canon and carnival: Challenging hierarchies in Zadie Smith's "NW"
Jan Rupp: New canons in the classroom: Teaching black British writing
Dirk Wiemann: The great unread: The shadow canon of Indian writing in English
Karin Höpker: 'Only in the chattel records' - Obscurity, historiography, and Frederick Douglass' "The heroic slave"
Tim Sommer: Charismatic authorship: Walter Scott, William Wordsworth, and the nineteenth-century construction of romantic canonicity
Sophie Spieler: No longer the 'text-book' of any generation: "Stover at Yale" and the non-canonical
Kirsten Hertel: Highbrow - Middlebrow - Broadbrow? J. B. Priestley and cultural re-education in postwar Germany
Ellen Redling: Canonizing youth in Mark Ravenhill's plays
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