1st Edition

Racism and Xenophobia in Early Twentieth-Century American Fiction When a House is Not a Home

By Wisam Abughosh Chaleila Copyright 2021
218 Pages
by Routledge

218 Pages
by Routledge

218 Pages
by Routledge

"The Melting Pot," "The Land of The Free," "The Land of Opportunity." These tropes or nicknames apparently reflect the freedom and open-armed welcome that the United States of America offers. However, the chronicles of history do not complement that image. These historical happenings have not often been brought into the focus of Modernist  literary criticism, though their existence in the record... Read more

Introduction

I Background

II When a House is Not a Home: Materialism, Nostalgia, and Death

III Racist, Xenophobic, and Materialist 1920s America

IV Collectiveness, Doubleness, and Imitation

The House of Mirth and the Spirit of the Roaring Twenties

Conclusion

Biography

Wisam Abughosh Chaleila is Assistant Professor and Head of the English Department at Al-Qasemi College of Education in Israel. She earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in English and German language and literature from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Later, she obtained a Joint Ph.D. degree in English and American literature from the University of Haifa in Israel and KU Leuven in Belgium. She was also enrolled in a postdoctoral program in KU Leuven. Chaleila specializes in literature and her teaching fields include Anglo-American literature and poetry, multi-ethnic literature, English teaching, and academic writing. Her research spans teaching approaches, critical theory, literary theory, early and modern literatures, poetic justice and law, American history, ethnic identity, Darwinism, and Marxism.