A New Reader of the Old South: Major Stories, Tales, Slave Narratives, Diaries, Travelogues, Poetry and Songs, 1820-1920Ben Forkner, Patrick H. Samway The literary Canon of the old South is redefined in this remarkable companion to the highly acclaimed A Modern Southern Reader. The literary canon of the old South is redefined in this remarkable companion to the highly acclaimed A Modern Southern Reader. Editors Ben Forkner and Patrick Samway, S. J. have selected from the most original and lasting works of nineteenth-century Southern writing (1820-1920) to reflect the full range of the Southern experience. The thorough introduction illuminates the individual pieces, providing insight into the culture of the Old South, from which rose a new generation of prominent, American writers. Features the work of Kate Chopin, Frederick Douglass, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Ellen Glasgow, Henry Grady, Joel Chandler Harris, Thomas Jefferson, James Weldon Johnson, Sidney Lanier, Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, Edgar Allen Poe, Mark Twain, and many others. |
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Page xxv
... write his own series of dialect stories based on the language and culture of the Southern black . Chesnutt had spent much of his boyhood and young adulthood in North Carolina during the Reconstruction period , but when he began writing ...
... write his own series of dialect stories based on the language and culture of the Southern black . Chesnutt had spent much of his boyhood and young adulthood in North Carolina during the Reconstruction period , but when he began writing ...
Page xlii
... write long after he had lost almost everything in the war , and retired with his wife , son , and mother to a remote Georgia farm he called " Copse Hill . " He will probably be remembered less for his verse , however , than as a ...
... write long after he had lost almost everything in the war , and retired with his wife , son , and mother to a remote Georgia farm he called " Copse Hill . " He will probably be remembered less for his verse , however , than as a ...
Page 171
... write , as I might have occasion to write my own pass . I consoled myself with the hope that I should one day find a good chance . Meanwhile , I would learn to write . The idea as to how I might learn to write was suggested to me by ...
... write , as I might have occasion to write my own pass . I consoled myself with the hope that I should one day find a good chance . Meanwhile , I would learn to write . The idea as to how I might learn to write was suggested to me by ...
Contents
A Plantation Echo | 106 |
The Edisto Raftsman | 122 |
Selections from Slave Narratives and Diaries | 131 |
Copyright | |
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A New Reader of the Old South: Major Stories, Tales, Slave Narratives ... Ben Forkner,Patrick H. Samway No preview available - 1991 |
Common terms and phrases
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