Stephen Crane : Uncollected Writings
Author: Stephen Crane
Publisher:
Published: 1963
Total Pages: 550
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRead and Download eBook Full
Author: Stephen Crane
Publisher:
Published: 1963
Total Pages: 550
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Harold Bloom
Publisher: Infobase Publishing
Published: 2007
Total Pages: 229
ISBN-13: 0791094294
DOWNLOAD EBOOKStephen Crane is widely recognized as a master of literary naturalism. His best-known works include the classic novel The Red Badge of Courage, the short stories "The Open Boat," "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky," and "The Blue Hotel," and some of the nineteenth century's most innovative lyric poems. The essays gathered in this updated volume offer a wealth of critical information and analysis that speaks to Crane's relevance and far-ranging influence. Book jacket.
Author: Richard M. Weatherford
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 2013-07-04
Total Pages: 363
ISBN-13: 1136211675
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis set comprises 40 volumes covering 19th and 20th century European and American authors. These volumes will be available as a complete set, mini boxed sets (by theme) or as individual volumes. This second set compliments the first 68 volume set of Critical Heritage published by Routledge in October 1995.
Author: William M. Morgan
Publisher: UPNE
Published: 2004
Total Pages: 268
ISBN-13: 9781584653882
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA fascinating reevaluation of U.S. literary realism during the Gilded Age.
Author: Daniel Hoffman
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Published: 1971
Total Pages: 334
ISBN-13: 9780231086622
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAvailable for the first time in English, this is the definitive account of the practice of sexual slavery the Japanese military perpetrated during World War II by the researcher principally responsible for exposing the Japanese government's responsibility for these atrocities. The large scale imprisonment and rape of thousands of women, who were euphemistically called "comfort women" by the Japanese military, first seized public attention in 1991 when three Korean women filed suit in a Toyko District Court stating that they had been forced into sexual servitude and demanding compensation. Since then the comfort stations and their significance have been the subject of ongoing debate and intense activism in Japan, much if it inspired by Yoshimi's investigations. How large a role did the military, and by extension the government, play in setting up and administering these camps? What type of compensation, if any, are the victimized women due? These issues figure prominently in the current Japanese focus on public memory and arguments about the teaching and writing of history and are central to efforts to transform Japanese ways of remembering the war. Yoshimi Yoshiaki provides a wealth of documentation and testimony to prove the existence of some 2,000 centers where as many as 200,000 Korean, Filipina, Taiwanese, Indonesian, Burmese, Dutch, Australian, and some Japanese women were restrained for months and forced to engage in sexual activity with Japanese military personnel. Many of the women were teenagers, some as young as fourteen. To date, the Japanese government has neither admitted responsibility for creating the comfort station system nor given compensation directly to former comfort women. This English edition updates the Japanese edition originally published in 1995 and includes introductions by both the author and the translator placing the story in context for American readers.
Author: Stephen Crane
Publisher: Courier Corporation
Published: 2016-06
Total Pages: 68
ISBN-13: 9780486404240
DOWNLOAD EBOOKExcellent collection offers new insight into the mind and poetic genius of an author primarily known for his fiction. Includes "The Black Riders," "War is Kind," and a selection from Crane's uncollected poetic works.
Author:
Publisher: Cambria Press
Published:
Total Pages: 296
ISBN-13: 1621968197
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: W. F. Garrett-Petts
Publisher: Broadview Press
Published: 1999-12-09
Total Pages: 158
ISBN-13: 9781551112541
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWriting about Literature is the first undergraduate text to integrate recent genre theory and a "writing in the disciplines" approach to the teaching of critical writing. While encouraging students to develop and value their own interpretations, the text helps undergraduates understand the rhetorical and institutional conventions of critical writing. A cross between a rhetoric and a casebook, Writing about Literature provides clear, practical advice and accessible models for writing critical essays on literature—on prose fiction in particular. This book offers students an insider's guide to the language, issues, approaches, styles, assumptions, and traditions that inform the writing of successful critical essays.
Author: Stephen Crane
Publisher: Penguin
Published: 1977-07-28
Total Pages: 577
ISBN-13: 0140150684
DOWNLOAD EBOOK“A man is born into the world with his own pair of eyes, and he is not responsible for his vision—he is merely responsible for his quality of personal honesty.” In the course of his tragically abbreviated career, Stephen Crane (1871–1900) saw things that his contemporaries preferred to overlook—the low life of New York’s Irish slums; the tedium, brutality, and chaos that were the true conditions of the Civil War; the ambiguous contract that binds a terrified man to his killer and the damned to their human judges. He communicated what he saw with the same laconic factuality that characterized his journalism and, in the process, laid the foundations for the unblinking realism of Hemingway and Dos Passos. The Portable Stephen Crane allows us to appreciate the full scope and power of this writer’s vision. It contains three complete novels—Maggie: A Girl of the Streets, George’s Mother, and Crane’s masterpiece, The Red Badge of Courage; nineteen short stories and sketches, including “The Blue Hotel” and “The Open Boat,” a barely fictionalized account of his own escape from shipwreck while covering the Cuban revolt against Spain; the previously unpublished essay “Above All Things”; letters and poems, plus a critical essay and notes by the noted Crane scholar Joseph Katz.
Author: Doug Underwood
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Published: 2011-09-01
Total Pages: 258
ISBN-13: 0252093437
DOWNLOAD EBOOKTo attract readers, journalists have long trafficked in the causes of trauma--crime, violence, warfare--as well as psychological profiling of deviance and aberrational personalities. Novelists, in turn, have explored these same subjects in developing their characters and by borrowing from their own traumatic life stories to shape the themes and psychological terrain of their fiction. In this book, Doug Underwood offers a conceptual and historical framework for comprehending the impact of trauma and violence in the careers and the writings of important journalist-literary figures in the United States and British Isles from the early 1700s to today. Grounded in the latest research in the fields of trauma studies, literary biography, and the history of journalism, this study draws upon the lively and sometimes breathtaking accounts of popular writers such as Charles Dickens, Ernest Hemingway, Dorothy Parker, Graham Greene, and Truman Capote, exploring the role that trauma has played in shaping their literary works. Underwood notes that the influence of traumatic experience upon journalistic literature is being reshaped by a number of factors, including news media trends, the advance of the Internet, the changing nature of the journalism profession, the proliferation of psychoactive drugs, and journalists' greater self-awareness of the impact of trauma in their work. The most extensive scholarly examination of the role that trauma has played in the shaping of our journalistic and literary heritage, Chronicling Trauma: Journalists and Writers on Violence and Loss discusses more than a hundred writers whose works have won them fame, even at the price of their health, their families, and their lives.