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A. R. Lee, Gothic to Multicultural. Idioms of Imagining in American Literary Fiction

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A. Robert LEE, Gothic to Multicultural. Idioms of Imagining in American Literary Fiction.


Amsterdam/New York, NY: Rodopi coll. "Costerus" (NS) n° 178, 2009, 543 pp.

  • Isbn 13 (ean): 978-90-420-2499-1

Présentation de l'éditeur:

Gothic to Multicultural: Idioms of Imagining in American Literary Fiction, twenty-three essays each carefully revised from the past four decades, explores both range and individual register. The collection opens with considerations of gothic as light and dark in Charles Brockden Brown, war and peace in Cooper's The Spy, Antarctica as world-genesis in Poe's The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, the link of “The Custom House” and main text in Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter, reflexive codings in Melville's Moby-Dick and The Confidence-Man, Henry James' Hawthorne as self-mirroring biography, and Stephen Crane's working of his Civil War episode in The Red Badge of Courage. Two composite lineages address apocalypse in African American fiction and landscape in women's authorship from Sarah Orne Jewett to Leslie Marmon Silko. There follow culture and anarchy in Henry James' The Princess Casamassima, text-into-film in Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence, modernist stylings in Fitzgerald, Faulkner and Hemingway, and roman noir in Cornell Woolrich. The collection then turns to the limitations of protest categorization for Richard Wright and Chester Himes, autofiction in J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye, and the novel of ideas in Robert Penn Warren's late fiction. Three closing essays take up multicultural genealogy, Harlem, then the Black South, in African American fiction, and the reclamation of voice in Native American fiction.


Table des matières:

Acknowledgements

Introduction: Pathways, Bearings

1. A Darkness Visible: Gothic and the Case of Charles Brockden Brown

2. Making History, Making Fiction: Cooper's The Spy

3. Impudent and Ingenious Fiction: Poe's The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket

4. Like a Dream Behind Me: Hawthorne's “The Custom-House” and The Scarlet Letter

5. The Mirrors of Biography, The Mirrors of Fiction: Henry James' Hawthorne

6. Moby-Dick as Anatomy

7. Voices Off, On, and Beyond: Ventriloquy in The Confidence-Man

8. Stephen Crane's The Red Badge of Courage: The Novella as Moving Box

9. Hell's Loose: Apocalypse in the Early and Modern African American Novel

10. Woman's Place? The Landscapes of Jewett, Chopin, Cather, Hurston, Welty, Chávez, Yamashita, Silko

11. Odd Man Out? Henry James, The Canon and The Princess Casamassima

12. Watching Manners: Martin Scorsese's The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence

13. A Quality of Distortion: Imagining The Great Gatsby

14. Everything Completely Knit Up: Seeing For Whom the Bell Tolls Whole

15. Modernist Faulkner? A Yoknapatawpha Trilogy

16. The View from the Rear Window: The Fiction of Cornell Woolrich

17. Richard Wright's Inside Narratives

18. Violence Become a Form: The Novels of Chester Himes

19. Flunking Everything Else Except English Anyway: Holden Caulfield, Author

20. The Place We Have Come To: The Late Fiction of Robert Penn Warren

21. Harlem on My Mind: Fictions of a Black Metropolis

22. Down Home: Mapping The South in Contemporary African American Fiction

23. I Am Your Worst Nightmare: I Am an Indian with a Pen – Fictions of the Indian, Native Fictions

Index

A. Robert Lee is Professor of American Literature at Nihon University, Tokyo, having previously taught at the University of Kent, UK. His publications include Designs of Blackness: Mappings in the Literature and Culture of Afro-America (1998), Multicultural American Literature: Comparative Black, Native, Latino/a and Asian American Fictions (2003), which won the American Book Award for 2004, Japan Textures: Sight and Word, with Mark Gresham (2007), and United States: Re-viewing Multicultural American Literature (2008).


Url de référence :
http://www.rodopi.nl/senj.asp?BookId=COS+178

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