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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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American Flaneur The Cosmic Physiognomy of Edgar Allan Poe

American Flaneur: The Cosmic Physiognomy of Edgar Allan Poe

1st Edition

By James Werner
November 16, 2011

American Flaneur investigates the connections between Edgar A. Poe and the nineteenth-century flaneur - or strolling urban observer - suggested in Walter Benjamin's discussion of Baudelaire. This study illustrates the centrality of the flaneur to Poe's literary aims, and uses the flaneur to ...

Dickens, Journalism, and Nationhood Mapping the World in Household Words

Dickens, Journalism, and Nationhood: Mapping the World in Household Words

1st Edition

By Sabine Clemm
January 06, 2011

Dickens, Journalism, and Nationhood examines Charles Dickens’ weekly family magazine Household Words in order to develop a detailed picture of how the journal negotiated, asserted and simultaneously deconstructed Englishness as a unified (and sometimes unifying) mode of expression. It offers ...

Philip K. Dick Canonical Writer of the Digital Age

Philip K. Dick: Canonical Writer of the Digital Age

1st Edition

By Lejla Kucukalic
November 10, 2010

Kucukalic looks beyond the received criticism and stereotypes attached to Philip K. Dick and his work and shows, using a wealth of primary documents including previously unpublished letters and interviews, that Philip K. Dick is a serious and relevant philosophical and cultural ...

Paul Auster's Postmodernity

Paul Auster's Postmodernity

1st Edition

By Brendan Martin
December 13, 2010

This book focuses upon the literary and autobiographical writings of American novelist Paul Auster, investigating his literary postmodernity in relation to a full range of his writings. Martin addresses Auster’s evocation of a range of postmodern notions, such as the duplicitous art of ...

Everybody's America Thomas Pynchon, Race, and the Cultures of Postmodernism

Everybody's America: Thomas Pynchon, Race, and the Cultures of Postmodernism

1st Edition

By David Witzling
July 21, 2010

Everybody’s America reassesses Pynchon’s literary career in order to explain the central role played by the racialization of American culture in the postmodernist deconstruction of subjectivity and literary authority and in the crisis in white liberal culture. It charts the evolution of both these ...

The Carver Chronotope Contextualizing Raymond Carver

The Carver Chronotope: Contextualizing Raymond Carver

1st Edition

By G.P. Lainsbury
December 24, 2009

Raymond Carver's fiction is widely known for its careful documentation of lower-middle-class North America in the 1970s and 80s. Building upon the realist understanding of Carver's work, Raymond Carver's Chronotope uses a central concept of Bakhtin's novelistics to formulate a new context for ...

Homosexuality in the Life and Work of Joseph Conrad Love Between the Lines

Homosexuality in the Life and Work of Joseph Conrad: Love Between the Lines

1st Edition

By Richard J. Ruppel
November 23, 2009

This book analyzes the representations of homosexuality in Conrad’s fiction, beginning with Conrad’s life and letters to show that Conrad himself was, at least imaginatively, bisexual. Conrad’s recurrent bouts of neurasthenia, his difficult courtships, late marriage, and frequent expressions of ...

Wallace Stevens and the Realities of Poetic Language

Wallace Stevens and the Realities of Poetic Language

1st Edition

By Stefan Holander
November 16, 2009

This study examines Wallace Stevens' ideas and practice of poetic language with a focus on the 1930s, an era in which Stevens persistently thematized a keenly felt pressure for the possible social involvement and political utility of poetic language. The argument suggests how mutually implicated ...

Our Scene is London Ben Jonson's City and the Space of the Author

Our Scene is London: Ben Jonson's City and the Space of the Author

1st Edition

By James D. Mardock
September 17, 2009

In this thought-provoking study Mardock looks at Ben Jonson's epigrams, prose, and verse satire in order to focus on Jonson's theatrical appropriations of London space both in and out of the playhouse. Through this critical analysis, the author argues that the strategies of...

Sports, Narrative, and Nation in the Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald

Sports, Narrative, and Nation in the Fiction of F. Scott Fitzgerald

1st Edition

By Jarom McDonald
June 16, 2009

This study examines the ways that F. Scott Fitzgerald portrayed organized spectator sports as working to help structure ideologies of class, community, and nationhood. Situating the study in the landscape of late nineteenth/early twentieth-century American sport culture, Chapter One shows how ...

Milton and the Spiritual Reader Reading and Religion in Seventeenth-Century England

Milton and the Spiritual Reader: Reading and Religion in Seventeenth-Century England

1st Edition

By David Ainsworth
March 24, 2008

Milton and the Spiritual Reader considers how John Milton’s later works demonstrate the intensive struggle of spiritual reading. Milton presents his own rigorous process of reading in order to instruct his readers how to advance their spiritual knowledge. Recent studies of Milton’s readers neglect ...

Elizabeth Stoddard & the Boundaries of Bourgeois Culture

Elizabeth Stoddard & the Boundaries of Bourgeois Culture

1st Edition

By Lynn Mahoney
December 01, 2003

Elizabeth Stoddard and the Boundaries of Bourgeois Culture traces Stoddard's emergence as a writer in the 1850s, her conflict-ridden relationships with the writers associated with the genteel tradition, and her efforts to negotiate the boundaries of Victorian culture in the United States. While in...

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