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Böcker i Studies in American Literary Realism and Naturalism-serien

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  • - American Literature and Culture in the Gilded Age, 18761893
    av Benjamin A. Railton
    467

  • - Edith Wharton and Material Culture
     
    507

    Explores many of Wharton's major novels - ""The House of Mirth"", ""The Fruit of the Tree"", ""The Custom of the Country"", ""Summer"", ""The Age of Innocence"", and ""Twilight Sleep"" - as well as her short stories, criticism, and essays.

  • - The Moon is Down as Propaganda
    av Donald V. Coers
    381

  • - The Tide of a Great Popular Movement
    av Jeffrey Alan Melton
    381

    Treats Mark Twain's travel narratives in the context of his contemporary travel writers and a burgeoning tourism culture. This book shows that Twain's 5 major travel narratives - ""The Innocents Abroad"", ""Roughing It"", ""Life on the Mississippi"", ""A Tramp Abroad"", and ""Following the Equator"" - demonstrate his mastery and reinvention of the genre.

  • - Nineteenth-century Benevolence Literature by American Women
     
    451

    Contains essays on the roles played by women in forming American attitudes about benevolence and poverty relief. This book talks about: images of the sentimental seamstress figure in women's fiction; Rebecca Harding Davis's rewriting of the ""industrial"" novel; the philanthropic work and writings of Hull House founder, Jane Addams; and more.

  • - California's Natural Resources and the Claim to Realism in Western American Literature
    av Nicolas S. Witschi
    381

    From nature writing to cowboy Westerns, the American West is known mainly through hackneyed representations in popular genres. Broadening our understanding of ""realism,"" this volume demonstrates the linkage of American literary realism to the texts, myths, and resources of the American West.

  • - Fiction and Social Consciousness in Howells, Jewett, Chesnutt, and Cather
    av Paul R. Petrie
    521

    In a series of influential essays that appeared in Harper's, WD Howells argued for literature as a vehicle for social change. The author explores the legacy of Howells's beliefs as they manifest themselves in Howell's fiction and in the works of three major American writers - Charles W Chesnutt, Sarah Orne Jewett, and Willa Cather.

  • - A Travel Reader
    av Mark Twain
    381

    Presents passages from all five of Mark Twain's travel narratives: ""The Innocents Abroad"", ""Roughing It"", ""A Tramp Abroad"", ""Life on the Mississippi"", and ""Following the Equator"".

  • - Scientific Racism and the Genres of American Fiction, 1892-1912
    av Cathy Boeckmann
    381

    Boeckmann links character, literary genre, and science, revealing how major literary works both contributed to and disrupted the construction of race in turn-of-the-century America.

  • - Edith Wharton and Material Culture
     
    521

    Explores many of Wharton's major novels - ""The House of Mirth"", ""The Fruit of the Tree"", ""The Custom of the Country"", ""Summer"", ""The Age of Innocence"", and ""Twilight Sleep"" - as well as her short stories, criticism, and essays.

  • - Literary and Intellectual Contexts
    av Gary Scharnhorst
    381

    By placing Charlotte Perkins Gilman in the company of her contemporaries, this collection seeks to correct misunderstandings of the feminist writer and lecturer as an isolated radical. Gilman believed and preached that no life is ever led in isolation; indeed, the cornerstone of her philosophy was the idea that ""humanity is a relation.

  • av Jr. Bush & Harold K.
    451

    Mark Twain is often pictured as a severe critic of religious piety, shaking his fist at God and mocking the devout. This book highlights Twain's attractions to and engagements with the variety of religious phenomena of America in his lifetime. It offers a more complicated understanding of Twain and his literary output.

  • - American Literary Realism and Graphic Illustration, 1880-1905
    av Adam Sonstegard
    627

    A landmark study of the illustrations that originally accompanied now-classic works of American literary realism

  • av Emily J. Orlando
    381

    Explores the author's concern with a 19th-century visual culture that limited female artistic agency and expression.

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