The Penguin History of Literature Volume 9: American Literature Since 1900: v. 9

The Penguin History of Literature Volume 9: American Literature Since 1900: v. 9

by Marcus Cunliffe (Author)

Synopsis

The new Modernist thought from Europe started to penetrate American life with remarkable speed. Malcolm Bradbury opens with an account of American fiction and poetry over the first 20 years of this century, contrasting the naturalism of Theodore Dreiser with the experimentalism of Gertrude Stein and Ezra Pound. Dennis Welland discusses the literature of the inter-war years, dominated by the writing of Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner. Moving through the next decades to the new post modern forms of the late 1960s onwards, Jerome Klinkowitz considers writers as diverse as Kurt Vonnegut, Ken Kesey and Philip Roth. There are sections on American poetry and a chapter on American theatre in which the work of America's first great dramatist, Eugene O'Neill, is assessed. The Penguin History of Literature is a critical survey of English and American literature in ten volumes. Each volume is a collection of original essays specially commissioned for the series, which, taken together, cover 14 centuries of literature from the Anglo-Saxons to the present.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 512
Edition: 3
Publisher: Penguin
Published: 02 Sep 1993

ISBN 10: 0140177590
ISBN 13: 9780140177596