The Literature of the United States of AmericaAmerican literature over the last four hundred years has developed distinctive qualities and traditions, partly engendered by the land itself. The rich variety of literature flourished as the land was colonised and cultivated. In this new edition Marshall Walker has updated his wide-ranging study of American literature by giving greater attention to poets from Hart Crane and e.e. Cummings to John Ashbery and A.R. Ammons and to novelists from William Burroughs and Kurt Vonnegut to John Irving. More space is given to drama, from the later works of Tennessee Williams and Arthur Miller to the plays of Sam Shepard and David Mamet. The special concerns of Black, Jewish and Women writers are explored as this book demonstrates that American literary history can no longer be considered largely in terms of regional dominances. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 31
Page 29
... North . The plantation system , the traumas of Civil War and Re- construction , and the rise and fall of the cotton economy combined to make the South become the most unified and self - conscious region of the United States ...
... North . The plantation system , the traumas of Civil War and Re- construction , and the rise and fall of the cotton economy combined to make the South become the most unified and self - conscious region of the United States ...
Page 31
... North Carolina farmers and backwoodsmen . The title of his less tolerant A Journey to the Land of Eden ( 1733 ) is ironic . Now the independence of the feckless North Carolina settlers strikes him as wasteful and dangerous . This is not ...
... North Carolina farmers and backwoodsmen . The title of his less tolerant A Journey to the Land of Eden ( 1733 ) is ironic . Now the independence of the feckless North Carolina settlers strikes him as wasteful and dangerous . This is not ...
Page 76
... North , under Abraham Lincoln . At the beginning of hostilities each side expected the engagement to be short and decisive . The North had the advantages of numbers , a comparatively stable economy and a navy . The Confederacy had self ...
... North , under Abraham Lincoln . At the beginning of hostilities each side expected the engagement to be short and decisive . The North had the advantages of numbers , a comparatively stable economy and a navy . The Confederacy had self ...
Contents
Terms of a tradition | 1 |
The colonies | 15 |
The revolution | 32 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American literature Anne Sexton artistic AUTHOR AND TITLE Black called century Chapter characters Chicago church Civil colony colour contemporary Crane culture D. H. Lawrence DATE AUTHOR dead death Dream Dreiser Eliot Emerson Emily Dickinson England English essay expression eyes Ezra Pound father Faulkner's feeling fiction frontier Gatsby Hawthorne Hemingway Henry Henry James hero House Huck human imagination Indians innocence James Jefferson John killed land language Leaves of Grass literary lives Melville Melville's mind Moby-Dick modern moral murder myth narrative nature Negro night novel play poem poet poetry political Pound President prose published Puritan reader realism reality Robert Penn Warren romantic satire Saturday Evening Post says sense sexual social society Song soul South Southern style symbol T. S. Eliot theme things Thomas Thoreau Transcendentalists Twain verse Virginia Wallace Stevens Whitman wife William William Burroughs woman women writing York