853 research outputs found

    The Wide Reach of Salvation: Christian Universalism in the Novels of Denise Giardina

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    The Damnation of Bryan Dalyrimpleand Theron Ware: F. Scott Fitzgerald\u27s Debt to Harold Frederic

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald\u27s debt to the fin de siecle American naturalists is well known. Princetonian Amory Blaine gives the most famous suggestion of the influence in This Side of Paradise when he finds himself rather surprised by his discovery through a critic named Mencken of several excellent American novels: \u27Vandover and the Brute,\u27 \u27The Damnation of Theron Ware,\u27 and \u27Jennie Gerhardt\u27 (209). Henry Dan Piper notes that Fitzgerald wrote this particular passage during the summer of 1919, when he revised his novel for the last time. It is likely that he had heard about all three books very recently ( Norris and Fitzgerald 395). That is not to say, however, that Fitzgerald did not come upon the novels of Norris, Dreiser, and Frederic at an important time in his literary formation. On the contrary, he discovered them just as he was writing - for the third time - This Side of Paradise ( Noah and Fitzgerald 393); and although by then, as Piper suggests, it was too late for them to have much of an influence on the first novel (Portrait 88), they did play an important part in the conceptualization of the second novel, The Beautiful and the Damned. In fact, Fitzgerald\u27s interest in the American naturalists was so intense and influential that it kept him from getting on with his second novel (84)

    Review of Depta\u27s The Helen Poems

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    Review of McFee\u27s That Was Oasis

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    Review of Worthington\u27s Larger Bodies Than Mine

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    Review of Conway\u27s African Banjo Echoes in Appalachia: A Study of Folk Traditions

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    Truth-Telling in Four Books of Appalachian Poetry

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    The Seeker

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    Text As Topos: Using the Toulmin Model of Argumentation in Introduction to Literature

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    The Quaker Poet in Community

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