Foreword, Leslie Elizabeth Eckel and Clare Frances Elliott; Introduction: The New Atlantic Literary Studies, Paul Giles; Part I: Atlantic Cultural Geographies; 1. The Silkworm and the Bee: Georgia, Cognitive Mapping, and the Atlantic Labour System in Boltzius and Thomson, Leonard von Morzé; 2. From Auburn to Upper Canada: Pastoral and Georgic Villages in the British Atlantic World, Juliet Shields; 3. London’s Pan-Atlantic Public Sphere: Luso-Hispanic Journals 1808-1830, Joselyn M. Almeida; 4. Emerson’s Atlantic States, Christopher Hanlon; Part II: Atlantic Mobilities; 5. Shifting Cultures and Transatlantic Imitations: The Case of Burney, Bennett, and Read, Eve Tavor Bannet; 6. ‘We are where we are’: Colm Tóibín’s Brooklyn, Mythologies of Return and the Post-Celtic Tiger Moment, Sinéad Moynihan; 7. Contemporary Atlantic Literature and the Unhappiness of Travel, Heidi Slettedahl Macpherson; Part III: The Black Atlantic; 8. Writing Race and Slavery in the Francophone Atlantic: Transatlantic Connections and Contradictions in Claire de Duras’s Ourika and Victor Hugo’s Bug-Jargal, Susan Castillo Street; 9. Crosscurrents of Black Utopianism: Martin R. Delany’s and Frederick Douglass’s Countercultural Atlantic, Leslie Elizabeth Eckel; 10. Black Diaspora Literature and the Question of Slavery, Yogita Goyal; Part IV: Atlantic Genders and Sexualities; 11. The Early Modern Queer Atlantic: Narratives of Sex and Gender on New World Soil, Jennifer Frangos; 12. ‘Local locas’: Trans-Antillean Queerness in Mayra Santos-Febres’s Sirena Selena, Ivonne M. García; 13. Queer Atlantic Modernism and Masculinity in Claude McKay’s Banjo and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Tender is the Night, Daniel Hannah; Part V: Reform and Revolution; 14. Urban Reform, Transatlantic Movements, and US Writers: 1837-1861, Brigitte Bailey; 15. Early Feminism and the Circulation of Self-Reliance in the Atlantic World, Clare Frances Elliott; 16. Suffragette Celebrity at Home from Abroad: Feminist Periodicals and Transatlantic Circulation, Barbara Green; Part VI: Atlantic Exchanges; 17. An Atlantic Adam: Emerson and the Origins of United States Literature, David Greenham; 18. Frances Hodgson Burnett and the ‘American Girl’ in England, Sarah Wagner-McCoy; 19. Music, Language, and (Latin) American Grains: William Carlos Williams’ Voyage to Pagany and ‘The Desert Music’, Daniel Katz; Part VII: Atlantic Ecologies; 20. ‘Calcutta still haunts my Fancy,’ or, the Confusion of Old and New World Ecologies in Early Caribbean Literature, Kirk McAuley; 21. ‘More Savage Than Bears or Wolves’: Animals, Colonialism, and the Aboriginal Atlantic, Kevin Hutchings; 22. Reading the ‘Book of Nature’: Emerson, the Hunterian Museum, and Transatlantic Science, Samantha Harvey; 23. Transatlantic Magazines and the Rise of Environmental Journalism, Susan Oliver; Part VIII: Atlantic Events; 24. Sputniks, Ice-Picks, G.P.U.: Nabokov’s Pale Fire, Adam Piette; 25. ‘O O O O that Shakespeherian Rag’: Bob Dylan, The Beatles and T. S. Eliot’s Transatlantic Encounters, Christopher Gair; 26. Unbridgeable Gaps: Time, Space and Memory in the Post-9/11 Novel, Catherine Morley; Selected Bibliography.