Edward J. O'Brien and His Role in the Rise of the American Short Story in the 1920s and 1930s

Edward J. O'Brien and His Role in the Rise of the American Short Story in the 1920s and 1930s

Author: Roy S. Simmonds

Publisher:

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 644

ISBN-13:

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This biography provides a balanced assessment of the true achievement of this complex and work-driven personality, who played an essential role as a discerning editor at a time when the short story scene in America was undergoing a radical evolution. In April 1916, Edward J. O'Brien published The Best Short Stories of 1915, which proved to be the first of the series of annual anthologies of the short stories he considered the cream of those appearing in US magazines during the preceding 12 months. It continued under his guidance until the 1941 volume published posthumously in his name. In the eyes of many young writers -Sherwood Anderson, Ernest Hemingway and William Saroyan, for example - he became regarded as a respected authority, providing them with encouragement and inspiration by reprinting their stories in his anthologies. He loyally supported the so-called little magazines and was instrumental in drawing the attention of both readers and writers to their existence. In Oxford, he co-edited the short-lived New Stories as an anticipated British equivalent of Story.


The Cambridge Companion to the American Short Story

The Cambridge Companion to the American Short Story

Author: Michael J. Collins

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2023-04-30

Total Pages: 411

ISBN-13: 1009292854

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This Companion offers students and scholars a comprehensive introduction to the development and the diversity of the American short story as a literary form from its origins in the eighteenth century to the present day. Rather than define what the short story is as a genre, or defend its importance in comparison with the novel, this Companion seeks to understand what the short story does – how it moves through national space, how it is always related to other genres and media, and how its inherent mobility responds to the literary marketplace and resonates with key critical themes in contemporary literary studies. The chapters offer authoritative introductions and reinterpretations of a literary form that has re-emerged as a major force in the twenty-first-century public sphere dominated by the Internet.


American Short Story since 1950

American Short Story since 1950

Author: Kasia Boddy

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Published: 2010-08-31

Total Pages: 185

ISBN-13: 0748686533

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This book focuses specifically on short fiction written since 1950, a particularly rich and diverse period in the history of the form. A selective approach has been taken, focusing on the best and most representative work.


100 Years of the Best American Short Stories

100 Years of the Best American Short Stories

Author: Lorrie Moore

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 753

ISBN-13: 0547485859

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Collects forty short stories published between 1915 and 2015, from writers that include Ernest Hemingway, John Updike, and Alice Munro that exemplify their era and stand the test of time --


Russomania

Russomania

Author: Rebecca Beasley

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2020-03-31

Total Pages: 553

ISBN-13: 0192522485

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Russomania: Russian Culture and the Creation of British Modernism provides a new account of modernist literature's emergence in Britain. British writers played a central role in the dissemination of Russian literature and culture during the early twentieth century, and their writing was transformed by the encounter. This study restores the thick history of that moment, by analyzing networks of dissemination and reception to recover the role of neglected as well as canonical figures, and institutions as well as individuals. The dominant account of British modernism privileges a Francophile genealogy, but the turn-of-the century debate about the future of British writing was a triangular debate, a debate not only between French and English models, but between French, English, and Russian models. Francophile modernists associated Russian literature, especially the Tolstoyan novel, with an uncritical immersion in 'life' at the expense of a mastery of style, and while individual works might be admired, Russian literature as a whole was represented as a dangerous model for British writing. This supposed danger was closely bound up with the politics of the period, and this book investigates how Russian culture was deployed in the close relationships between writers, editors, and politicians who made up the early twentieth-century intellectual class--the British intelligentsia. Russomania argues that the most significant impact of Russian culture is not to be found in stylistic borrowings between canonical authors, but in the shaping of the major intellectual questions of the period: the relation between language and action, writer and audience, and the work of art and lived experience. The resulting account brings an occluded genealogy of early modernism to the fore, with a different arrangement of protagonists, different critical values, and stronger lines of connection to the realist experiments of the Victorian past, and the anti-formalism and revived romanticism of the 1930s and 1940s future.


The Cambridge History of American Modernism

The Cambridge History of American Modernism

Author: Mark Whalan

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2023-06-30

Total Pages: 948

ISBN-13: 1108808026

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The Cambridge History of American Modernism examines one of the most innovative periods of American literary history. It offers a comprehensive account of the forms, genres, and media that characterized US modernism: coverage ranges from the traditional, such as short stories, novels, and poetry, to the new media that shaped the period's literary culture, such as jazz, cinema, the skyscraper, and radio. This volume charts how recent methodologies such as ecocriticism, geomodernism, and print culture studies have refashioned understandings of the field, and attends to the contestations and inequities of race, sovereignty, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity that shaped the period and its cultural production. It also explores the geographies and communities wherein US modernism flourished-from its distinctive regions to its metropolitan cities, from its hemispheric connections to the salons and political groupings that hosted new cultural collaborations.


Richard Wright in Context

Richard Wright in Context

Author: Michael Nowlin

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2021-07-22

Total Pages: 652

ISBN-13: 1108803296

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Richard Wright was one of the most influential and complex African American writers of the twentieth century. Best known as the trailblazing, bestselling author of Native Son and Black Boy, he established himself as an experimental literary intellectual in France who creatively drew on some of the leading ideas of his time - Marxism, existentialism, psychoanalysis, and postcolonialism - to explore the sources and meaning of racism both in the United States and worldwide. Richard Wright in Context gathers thirty-three new essays by leading scholars relating Wright's writings to biographical, regional, social, literary, and intellectual contexts essential to understanding them. It explores the places that shaped his life and enabled his literary destiny, the social and cultural contexts he both observed and immersed himself in, and the literary and intellectual contexts that made him one the most famous Black writers in the world at mid-century.


A Comprehensive Study of American Writer Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, 1844-1911

A Comprehensive Study of American Writer Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, 1844-1911

Author: Ronna Coffey Privett

Publisher:

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 338

ISBN-13:

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This work examines the novels, essays, and short stories of Elizabeth Stuart Phelps within their cultural/historical context. It examines the social climate and reform movements during Phelps' writing career, and shows how she was a woman ahead of her time in the 19th century.


A Hobo Life in the Great Depression

A Hobo Life in the Great Depression

Author: Edward C. Weideman

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 250

ISBN-13:

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Weideman's writing provides a classic expression of the American experience sometimes labeled as "modernism", which encompasses the early 20th-century search for the meaning of life in an era of social and economic breakdown characterized by a sense of loss of a stable, secure world based on a belief in and reliance on absolute truth.


The Life and Work of Writer Annie Trumbull Slosson

The Life and Work of Writer Annie Trumbull Slosson

Author: Edward Ifkovic

Publisher:

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 534

ISBN-13:

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Annie Trumbull Slosson (1832-1926) was an important short story writer who epitomized the American local color movement that flourished after the Civil War and ended at the beginning of the twentieth century. Along with writers like Sarah Orne Jewett, Mary Wilkins Freeman and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, she helped establish the popular and critical model of the short story in which location and idiosyncratic characterization identified a particular region of the United States. In New England women dominated the genre, for the isolated farms and desolate villages were often places where women and old men lived - the young men had died in the war or had gone west in search of gold. Slosson's first work, The China Hunter's Club (1878), helped establish the viability of local dialect, building on the tradition established by Harriet Beecher Stowe and Catherine Sedgwick. But in her two most important volumes, Seven Dreamers (1890) and Dumb Foxglove and Other Stories (1898) she reached full maturity, with stories that developed the mystical/psychological ramifications of her characters, mostly older women who abandoned the old-style Congregational/Calvinist puritanism of their forebears and