Making American Tradition: Visions and Revisions from Ben Franklin to Alice WalkerRutgers University Press, 1990 - 252 psl. Strout shows how an American tradition has developed through the responses of writers to the works of previous writers. He begins with the influence of Tocqueville on American literature, and how his vision brought minimal attention to time and place, and fostered the neglect of southern, black and female writers. Strout demonstrates how writers shed new light on many American themes as they responded to the predecessors. His comparisons cover Hawthorne and Updike; Emerson, Whitman, and William James; Twain and Doctorow; Twain and Faulkner; Lincoln and Jefferson; and Alice Walker and Ralph Ellison. ISBN 0-8135-1516-5 (pbk.) : $13.00. |
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143 psl.
... tion of Independence would be grounds of hope for others . " It was meant to be , Lincoln argued , a standard maxim for free society to be constantly approximated in the future . Against Douglas , Lincoln ridi- culed the ...
... tion of Independence would be grounds of hope for others . " It was meant to be , Lincoln argued , a standard maxim for free society to be constantly approximated in the future . Against Douglas , Lincoln ridi- culed the ...
145 psl.
... tion and the appalling complexity of the problem it presented . " 45 What is remarkable about his role in the debates with Douglas is not so much his eloquence , which is occasional , but rather his close historical reasoning and his ...
... tion and the appalling complexity of the problem it presented . " 45 What is remarkable about his role in the debates with Douglas is not so much his eloquence , which is occasional , but rather his close historical reasoning and his ...
180 psl.
... tion than this problem of developing non - violent resistance . " Secular imagination could not muster " the sublime madness which disregards immediate appearances and emphasizes profound and ultimate unities . These passages , looked ...
... tion than this problem of developing non - violent resistance . " Secular imagination could not muster " the sublime madness which disregards immediate appearances and emphasizes profound and ultimate unities . These passages , looked ...
Turinys
The Minister and | 22 |
The Female Trance | 40 |
Emerson Whitman | 72 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 9
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Adams Alice Alice Walker American literature Benito Cereno Boston Cahan character Chick Christian church contemporary contrast critics culture Declaration Doctorow's earlier Edith Edith Wharton Ellison Emerson Endicott England Essays experience father Faulkner fiction Franklin freedom Gatsby Hawthorne Hawthorne's Henry James hero Hester Howells's Huck Huey Long Ibid idea imagination Indian innocent intellectual Invisible James's Jefferson King's later liberal Lincoln literary living Lowell's marriage Melville Melville's Meridian modern moral Morgan movement narrator Negro nonviolent novel novelist Old Glory philosopher play poet political portrait pragmatism Puritan Quoted radical Ragtime Ralph Ellison reader Reinhold Niebuhr religion religious Revolution Revolutionary Richard Wright Robert Lowell role Scarlet Letter sense sexual slave slavery social Southern speech story tells Territory theme tion tradition Twain's University Press Updike W. D. Howells Walker Warren Wharton Whitman William Dean Howells William James Willie woman writers Yankee York