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The Columbia Literary History of the United States
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15 February 1988
For the first time in four decades, there exists an authoritative and up-to-date survey of the literature of the United States, from prehistoric cave narratives to the radical movements of the sixties and the experimentation of the eighties.
This comprehensive volume—one of the century's most important books in American studies—extensively treats Hawthorne, Melville, Dickinson, Hemingway, and other long-cherished writers, while also giving considerable attention to recently discovered writers such as Kate Chopin and to literary movements and forms of writing not studied amply in the past. Informed by the most current critical and theoretical ideas, it sets forth a generation's interpretation of the rise of American civilization and culture.
The Columbia Literary History of the United States contains essays by today's foremost scholars and critics, overseen by a board of distinguished editors headed by Emory Elliott of Princeton University. These contributors reexamine in contemporary terms traditional subjects such as the importance of Puritanism, Romanticism, and frontier humor in American life and writing, but they also fully explore themes and materials that have only begun to receive deserved attention in the last two decades. Among these are the role of women as writers, readers, and literary subjects and the impact of writers from minority groups, both inside and outside the literary establishment.
Preface
General Introduction
Note on the Text
Acknowledgments
Part One. Beginnings to 1810
I. A Key into the Languages of America
II. The Prose and Poetry of Colonial America
III. America in Transition
IV. The Literature of the New Republic
Part Two. 1810-1865
I. The Age in Perspective
II. Cultural Diversity and Literary Forms
III. Intellectual Movements and Social Change
IV. The American Renaissance
Part Three. 1865-1910
I. Signs of the Times
II. Genre Deliberations
III. Literary Diversities
IV. Major Voices
Part Four. 1910-1945
I. Contexts and Backgrounds
II. Regionalism, Ethnicity, and Gender: Comparative Literary Cultures
III. Fiction
IV. Poetry and Criticism
Part Five. 1945 to the Present
I. The Postwar Era
II. Forms and Genres
III. The Present
Notes on Contributors
Index