The American Novel and Its Tradition

The American Novel and Its Tradition
Title The American Novel and Its Tradition PDF eBook
Author Richard Chase
Publisher
Total Pages 296
Release 1957
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN

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Through romance, these writers mirror the extremes of American culture--the Puritan melodrama of good and evil, or the pastoral idyll inspired by the American wilderness.

The American Novel and Its Tradition

The American Novel and Its Tradition
Title The American Novel and Its Tradition PDF eBook
Author Richard Volney Chase
Publisher
Total Pages 266
Release 1986
Genre American fiction
ISBN

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The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition

The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition
Title The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition PDF eBook
Author Bernard W. Bell
Publisher Univ of Massachusetts Press
Total Pages 452
Release 1987
Genre History
ISBN

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This study is an addition to the growing body of scholarly analysis examining the Afro-American contribution. It is based on the premise that in the last 25 years the traditional canon of American literature excluded important minority authors. Proceeding chronologically from William Wells Brown's Clotel (1853), to experimental novels of the 1980s, Bell comments on more than 150 works, with close readings of 41 novelists. His remarks are framed by an inquiry into the distinctive elements of Afro-American fiction. ISBN 0-87023-568-0 : $25.00.

The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition

The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition
Title The Afro-American Novel and Its Tradition PDF eBook
Author Bernard W. Bell
Publisher Amherst : University of Massachusetts Press
Total Pages 456
Release 1987
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN

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This study is an addition to the growing body of scholarly analysis examining the Afro-American contribution. It is based on the premise that in the last 25 years the traditional canon of American literature excluded important minority authors. Proceeding chronologically from William Wells Brown's Clotel (1853), to experimental novels of the 1980s, Bell comments on more than 150 works, with close readings of 41 novelists. His remarks are framed by an inquiry into the distinctive elements of Afro-American fiction. ISBN 0-87023-568-0 : $25.00.

The Cambridge History of the American Novel

The Cambridge History of the American Novel
Title The Cambridge History of the American Novel PDF eBook
Author Leonard Cassuto
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 1271
Release 2011-03-24
Genre Literary Collections
ISBN 0521899079

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An authoritative and lively account of the development of the genre, by leading experts in the field.

Muting White Noise

Muting White Noise
Title Muting White Noise PDF eBook
Author James H. Cox
Publisher University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages 354
Release 2012-11-19
Genre Fiction
ISBN 0806185465

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Native American fiction writers have confronted Euro-American narratives about Indians and the colonial world those narratives help create. These Native authors offer stories in which Indians remake this colonial world by resisting conquest and assimilation, sustaining their cultures and communities, and surviving. In Muting White Noise, James H. Cox considers how Native authors have liberated our imaginations from colonial narratives. Cox takes his title from Sherman Alexie, for whom the white noise of a television set represents the white mass-produced culture that mutes American Indian voices. Cox foregrounds the work of Native intellectuals in his readings of the American Indian novel tradition. He thereby develops a critical perspective from which to re-see the role played by the Euro-American novel tradition in justifying and enabling colonialism. By examining novels by Native authors—especially Thomas King, Gerald Vizenor, and Alexie—Cox shows how these writers challenge and revise colonizers’ tales about Indians. He then offers “red readings” of some revered Euro-American novels, including Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick, and shows that until quite recently, even those non-Native storytellers who sympathized with Indians could imagine only their vanishing by story’s end. Muting White Noise breaks new ground in literary criticism. It stands with Native authors in their struggle to reclaim their own narrative space and tell stories that empower and nurture, rather than undermine and erase, American Indians and their communities.

Truth's Ragged Edge

Truth's Ragged Edge
Title Truth's Ragged Edge PDF eBook
Author Philip F. Gura
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Total Pages 354
Release 2013-04-09
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1429951346

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From the acclaimed cultural historian Philip F. Gura comes Truth's Ragged Edge, a comprehensive and original history of the American novel's first century. Grounded in Gura's extensive consideration of the diverse range of important early novels, not just those that remain widely read today, this book recovers many long-neglected but influential writers—such as the escaped slave Harriet Jacobs, the free black Philadelphian Frank J. Webb, and the irrepressible John Neal—to paint a complete and authoritative portrait of the era. Gura also gives us the key to understanding what sets the early novel apart, arguing that it is distinguished by its roots in "the fundamental religiosity of American life." Our nation's pioneering novelists, it turns out, wrote less in the service of art than of morality. This history begins with a series of firsts: the very first American novel, William Hill Brown's The Power of Sympathy, published in 1789; the first bestsellers, Susanna Rowson's Charlotte Temple and Hannah Webster Foster's The Coquette, novels that were, like Brown's, cautionary tales of seduction and betrayal; and the first native genre, religious tracts, which were parables intended to instruct the Christian reader. Gura shows that the novel did not leave behind its proselytizing purpose, even as it evolved. We see Catharine Maria Sedgwick in the 1820s conceiving of A New-England Tale as a critique of Puritanism's harsh strictures, as well as novelists pushing secular causes: George Lippard's The Quaker City, from 1844, was a dark warning about growing social inequality. In the next decade certain writers—Hawthorne and Melville most famously—began to depict interiority and doubt, and in doing so nurtured a broader cultural shift, from social concern to individualism, from faith in a distant god to faith in the self. Rich in subplots and detail, Gura's narrative includes enlightening discussions of the technologies that modernized publishing and allowed for the printing of novels on a mass scale, and of the lively cultural journals and literary salons of early nineteenth-century New York and Boston. A book for the reader of history no less than the reader of fiction, Truth's Ragged Edge—the title drawn from a phrase in Melville, about the ambiguity of truth—is an indispensable guide to the fascinating, unexpected origins of the American novel.