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Studies in Major Literary Authors


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Studies in Major Literary Authors features outstanding scholarship on celebrated and neglected authors of both canonical and lesser-known texts.

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Who Reads Ulysses? The Common Reader and the Rhetoric of the Joyce Wars

Who Reads Ulysses?: The Common Reader and the Rhetoric of the Joyce Wars

1st Edition

By Julie Sloan Brannon
June 11, 2009

Julie Sloan Brannon examines the Joyce Wars as a fascinating nexus of the conflicts between scholars and ordinary readers, and one that illuminates the existence of ulysses -and by extension, Joyce-as an example of Lyotard's differend , an icon that exists simultaneously in two separate yet ...

Creating Yoknapatawpha Readers and Writers in Faulkner's Fiction

Creating Yoknapatawpha: Readers and Writers in Faulkner's Fiction

1st Edition

By Owen Robinson
June 11, 2009

Creating Yoknapatawpha is a study of the crucial interplay of reading and writing processes involved in constructing the textual environment of William Faulkner’s work, and the nature and significance of the world created by these many forces. Yoknapatawpha County, the author contends, is the ...

Joyce and the Perverse Ideal

Joyce and the Perverse Ideal

1st Edition

By David Cotter
October 25, 2013

Representations of masochism--both overt and oblique--permeate the work of James Joyce. While a number of criticshave noted this, to date there has been no sustained and focused analysis of this trope in his writings. David Cotter argues that such an examination is key to understanding the meanings...

Edith Wharton's Evolutionary Conception Darwinian Allegory in the Major Novels

Edith Wharton's Evolutionary Conception: Darwinian Allegory in the Major Novels

1st Edition

By Paul J. Ohler
January 26, 2010

Edith Wharton's "Evolutionary Conception" investigates Edith Wharton's engagement with evolutionary theory in The House of Mirth, The Custom of the Country, and The Age of Innocence. The book also examines The Descent of Man, The Fruit of the Tree, Twilight Sleep, and The Children to show that ...

A New Matrix for Modernism A Study of the Lives and Poetry of Charlotte Mew & Anna Wickham

A New Matrix for Modernism: A Study of the Lives and Poetry of Charlotte Mew & Anna Wickham

1st Edition

By Nelljean Rice
September 09, 2013

Many studies of poetic modernism focus on the avatars of High Modernism, Eliot, Pound and Yeats, who created a critical coterie based on culture and class. A New Matrix for Modernism introduces a matrilineage for modernism that traces a distinct women's poetic voice from the Bronte sisters ...

Edith Wharton as Spatial Activist and Analyst

Edith Wharton as Spatial Activist and Analyst

1st Edition

By Reneé Somers
June 11, 2009

Because she devoted much of her life to exploring the relationships that exist between people and their built environment, Edith Wharton developed a set of philosophies that she expressed in many arenas, including interior design, architecture, and landscaping. Her theories of space were practiced ...

Milton's Uncertain Eden Understanding Place in Paradise Lost

Milton's Uncertain Eden: Understanding Place in Paradise Lost

1st Edition

By Andrew Mattison
June 11, 2009

This study describes a variety of ways of thinking about place in the Renaissance and in Paradise Lost. Despite coming from different perspectives, they have in common the idea that the difficulty of the relationship of reciprocity that poetic subjects often expect from their environment ...

Modernist Aesthetics and Consumer Culture in the Writings of Oscar Wilde

Modernist Aesthetics and Consumer Culture in the Writings of Oscar Wilde

1st Edition

By Paul Fortunato
June 11, 2009

Oscar Wilde was a consumer modernist. His modernist aesthetics drove him into the heart of the mass culture industries of 1890s London, particularly the journalism and popular theatre industries. Wilde was extremely active in these industries: as a journalist at the Pall Mall Gazette; as magazine...

Delicate Pursuit Discretion in Henry James and Edith Wharton

Delicate Pursuit: Discretion in Henry James and Edith Wharton

1st Edition

By Jessica Levine
September 09, 2013

Delicate Pursuit explores the way in which Henry James and Edith Wharton treated subject matter that was considered controversial by American publishers at the turn of the century. In their treatment of risque topics, James and Wharton pursued discretion, the key concept of this study, in order to ...

Editing Emily Dickinson The Production of an Author

Editing Emily Dickinson: The Production of an Author

1st Edition

By Lena Christensen
July 29, 2013

Editing Emily Dickinson considers the processes through which Dickinson's work has been edited in the twentieth century and how such editorial processes contribute specifically to the production of Emily Dickinson as author.  The posthumous editing of her handwritten manuscripts into the ...

Gertrude Stein and the Making of an American Celebrity

Gertrude Stein and the Making of an American Celebrity

1st Edition

By Karen Leick
August 02, 2012

This book is a cultural history of Stein’s rise to fame and the function of literary celebrity in America from 1910 to 1935. By examining not the ways that Stein portrayed the popular in her work, but the ways the popular portrayed her, this study shows that there was an intimate relationship ...

The Politics of Humiliation in the Novels of J.M. Coetzee

The Politics of Humiliation in the Novels of J.M. Coetzee

1st Edition

By Hania Nashef
August 02, 2012

In this volume, Nashef looks at J.M. Coetzee's concern with universal suffering and the inevitable humiliation of the human being as manifest in his novels. Though several theorists have referred to the theme of human degradation in Coetzee’s work, no detailed study has been made of this area of ...

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