Authors
Characters
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Isabel Archer
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Huckleberry Finn
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Tom Sawyer
Places
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Boston, Massachusetts
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New York, New York
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Mississippi River
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New Orleans, Louisiana
Movements
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naturalism
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realism
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regionalism
Genres
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bildungsroman
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critical essay
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realistic novel
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lyric poem
regional short story
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Literature
By Mark Canada
Professor, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Whereas Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne,
Ralph Waldo Emerson and other antebellum writers in some ways
detached themselves from the world around them, nearly all of
the
major postbellum writers immersed themselves in it. As journalists,
Rebecca Harding Davis, William Dean Howells, Stephen Crane,
Theodore Dreiser, and others traveled widely and came in close
contact with real people, including some who were suffering the
negative effects of industrialization and urbanization. Mark
Twain's
career as a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi River gave him
similar
contact with the world. Equally immersed in the culture were
these
writers' works, which they published in magazines such as the
Atlantic Monthly and in subscription books sold door to
door.
These writers' worldly experiences and perspectives shaped the
postbellum period's three major literary movements: realism,
regionalism, and naturalism. Reacting against the extravangances
of
literary romance, which recounted the glorious adventures of
larger-than-life characters, the realists tried to portray life
accurately
rather than idealistically. A character in Howells's novel
The Rise of
Silas Lapham states the realists' credo when he points
out that "the
novelists would be best to us if they painted life as it is."
Thus,
Howells, Twain, and Henry James depicted the aspirations, conflicts,
and triumphs of convincing characters, such as a coarse orphan,
a
simple businessman, or a young woman in search of her identity.
The writers of regional fiction, sometimes called "local color,"
also
strove for authenticity. Capitalizing on the popularity of magazines,
Bret Harte, Kate Chopin, and many other writers used details
of
landscape, dialect, and character to transport readers to distant,
exotic American locales, such as the West, New Orleans, and the
rural South. Finally, French naturalism, which depicts realistic
characters struggling with social and other forces, caught on
in
America perhaps because the journalistic experiences of Stephen
Crane, Frank Norris, and Theodore Dreiser put them in touch with
the struggles of lower-class figures.
Study Questions
1.One of the most important literary developments
to take place
in this century is the transition from
romanticism to realism.
Citing several examples, describe the
major characteristics of
each movement and explain why this change
took place.
2.Citing works published both before and after the
Civil War,
trace the emphasis on the self in this
century. |