An authoritative guide to American literature, this Companion examines the experimental forms, socio-cultural changes, literary movements, and major authors of the early 20th century. This Companion provides authoritative and wide-ranging guidance on early twentieth-century American fiction.
* Considers commonly studied authors such as Faulkner, Fitzgerald, and Hemingway, alongside key texts of the period by Richard Wright, Charles Chesnutt, Zora Neale Hurston, and Anzia Yezierska
* Examines how the works of these diverse writers have been interpreted in their own day and how current readings have expanded our understanding of their cultural and literary significance
* Covers a broad range of topics, including the First and Second World Wars, literary language differences, author celebrity, the urban landscape, modernism, the Jazz Age, the Great Depression, regionalism, and African-American fiction
* Gives students the contextual information necessary for formulating their own critiques of classic American fiction
Inhoudsopgave
Notes on Contributors vii
Chronology xi
Acknowledgments xviii
Introduction 1
1 Turning the Century 17
Michael A. Elliott and Jennifer A. Hughes
2 Women and Modernity 37
Jennifer L. Fleissner
3 Queer Modernity and Lesbian Representation 57
Kathryn R. Kent
4 Markets and ‘Gatekeepers’ 77
Loren Glass
5 Manhood, Modernity, and Crime Fiction 94
David Schmid
6 American Sentences: Terms, Topics, and Techniques in Stylistic Analysis 113
Paul Simpson and Donald E. Hardy
7 The Great Gatsby as Mobilization Fiction: Rethinking Modernist Prose 132
Keith Gandal
8 Modernism’s History of the Dead 158
Michael Szalay
9 The Radical 1930s 186
Alan M. Wald
10 Racial Uplift and the Politics of African American Fiction 205
Gene Andrew Jarrett
11 The Modernism of Southern Literature 228
Florence Dore
12 Cosmopolis 253
Mary Esteve
13 Other Modernisms 275
John Carlos Rowe
Index 295
Over de auteur
Peter Stoneley is Professor of English in the School of
English and American Literature at the University of Reading. He is
author of Mark Twain and the Feminine Aesthetic (1992),
Consumerism and American Girls’ Literature,
1860-1940 (2003), and A Queer History of the
Ballet (2006).
Cindy Weinstein is Professor of English at the California
Institute of Technology. She is author of Family, Kinship, and
Sympathy in Nineteenth-Century American Literature (2004),
The Literature of Labor and the Labors of Literature: Allegory
in Nineteenth-Century American Fiction (1995), and editor of
The Cambridge Companion to Harriet Beecher Stowe (2004).