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A Companion to the Regional Literatures of America
Charles L. Crow (Edited by)
9780631226314, Wiley
Hardback, published 15 May 2003
624 pages
25 x 20 x 1.5 cm, 1.361 kg
“A Companion to the Regional Literatures of America is a significant achievement and could prove a powerful tool for those who wish to make considerations of space and place even more central to their disciplines.” Jeremy Wells, Western American Literature 'In short, Charles L. Crow's volume is a must, an essential purchase.' Reference Reviews
The Blackwell Companion to American Regional Literature is the most comprehensive resource yet published for study of this popular field.
List of Illustrations viii Notes on Contributors ix Acknowledgments xiv Introduction 1 PART I History and Theory of Regionalism in the United States 5 1 Contemporary Regionalism 7 2 The Cultural Work of American Regionalism 25 3 Letting Go our Grand Obsessions: Notes toward a New Literary History of the American Frontiers 42 4 Region and Race: National Identity and the Southern Past 57 5 Regionalism in the Era of the New Deal 74 6 Realism and Regionalism 92 7 Taking Feminism and Regionalism toward the Third Wave 111 8 Regionalism and Ecology 129 9 The City as Region 137 10 Indigenous Peoples and Place 154 11 Borders, Bodies, and Regions: The United States and the Caribbean 171 PART II Mapping Regions 193 12 New England Literature and Regional Identity 195 13 The Great Plains 213 14 Forgotten Frontier: Literature of the Old Northwest 231 15 The Old Southwest: Humor, Tall Tales, and the Grotesque 247 16 The Plantation School: Dissenters and Countermyths 266 17 The Fugitive-Agrarians and the Twentieth-Century Southern Canon 286 18 Romanticizing a Different Lost Cause: Regional Identities in Louisiana and the Bayou Country 306 19 The Sagebrush School Revived 324 20 Re-envisioning the Big Sky: Regional Identity, Spatial Logics, and the Literature of Montana 344 21 Regions of California: Mountains and Deserts 363 22 Regions of California: The Great Central Valley 379 23 Los Angeles as a Literary Region 397 24 North and Northwest: Theorizing the Regional Literatures of Alaska and the Pacific Northwest 412 25 Texas and the Great Southwest 432 26 Hawai’i 458 PART III Some Regionalist Masters 477 27 Bret Harte and the Literary Construction of the American West 479 28 Mark Twain: A Man for All Regions 496 29 Willa Cather’s Glittering Regions 513 30 “I have seen America emerging”: Mary Austin’s Regionalism 532 31 “I have never recovered from the country”: The American West of Wallace Stegner 551 Index 572
Michael Kowalewski
Stephanie Foote
Annette Kolodny
Lori Robison
Lauren Coats and Nihad M. Farooq
Donna Campbell
Krista Comer
David Mazel
James Kyung-Jin Lee
P. Jane Hafen
Vera M. Kutzinski
Kent C. Ryden
Diane D. Quantic
Bev Hogue
Rosemary D. Cox
Sarah E. Gardner
Farrell O’Gorman
Suzanne Disheroon-Green
Lawrence I. Berkove
Susan Kollin
Nicolas Witschi
Charles L. Crow
David Fine
Susan Kollin
Mark Busby
Brenda Kwon
Gary Scharnhorst
Lawrence I. Berkove
Robert Thacker
Betsy Klimasmith
Richard H. Cracroft
Subject Areas: Literature: history & criticism [DS]
