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Studies in Major Literary Authors


About the Series

Studies in Major Literary Authors features outstanding scholarship on celebrated and neglected authors of both canonical and lesser-known texts.

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No Image There and the Gaze Remains The Visual in the Work of Jorie Graham

No Image There and the Gaze Remains: The Visual in the Work of Jorie Graham

1st Edition

By Catherine Karaguezian
January 14, 2014

To date, no book-length study of the work of poet Jorie Graham has been published. Graham now holds the prestigious Boylston Professorship of Rhetoric and Oratory at Harvard University; recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship and a Pulitzer Prize, Graham has established herself as one of the most ...

Thoughts Painfully Intense Hawthorne and the Invalid Author

Thoughts Painfully Intense: Hawthorne and the Invalid Author

1st Edition

By James Mancall
January 16, 2014

First Published in 2002. This work reads Hawthorne's fiction inthe context of nineteenth-century medical and psuedomedical discourse that linked men of letters to debilitated invalids, a stereotype against which Hawthorne struggled throughout his career....

Lost City Fitzgerald's New York

Lost City: Fitzgerald's New York

1st Edition

By Lauraleigh O'Meara
January 14, 2014

F. Scott Fitzgerald left behind a substantial body of work on New York, yet his city remains in our time terra incognita, talked about but rarely well met. Lost City takes on this important and under-examined, indeed misunderstood and misrepresented, aspect of Fitzgerald's writing. The author shows...

Writing Out of All the Camps J.M. Coetzee's Narratives of Displacement

Writing Out of All the Camps: J.M. Coetzee's Narratives of Displacement

1st Edition

By Laura Wright
July 01, 2009

Writing "Out of all the Camps": J. M. Coetzee's Narratives of Displacement is an interdisciplinary examination--combining ethical, postcolonial, performance, gender-based, and environmental theory--of the ways that 2003 Nobel Prize-winning South African novelist J. M. Coetzee, primarily through his...

A Singing Contest Conventions of Sound in the Poetry of Seamus Heaney

A Singing Contest: Conventions of Sound in the Poetry of Seamus Heaney

1st Edition

By Meg Tyler
August 21, 2013

A formal analysis A Singing Contest comprises close readings of Seamus Heaney's poetry. Tyler argues that in an era of fractured poetry and politics, Seamus Heaney stands out: his impulse is towards unity and regeneration. Her book considers the interplay between different kinds of literary ...

No Place for Home Spatial Constraint and Character Flight in the Novels of Cormac McCarthy

No Place for Home: Spatial Constraint and Character Flight in the Novels of Cormac McCarthy

1st Edition

By Jay Ellis
June 16, 2009

This book was written to venture beyond interpretations of Cormac McCarthy's characters as simple, antinomian, and non-psychological; and of his landscapes as unrelated to the violent arcs of often orphaned and always emotionally isolated and socially detached characters. As McCarthy usually ...

Pynchon and History Metahistorical Rhetoric and Postmodern Narrative Form in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon

Pynchon and History: Metahistorical Rhetoric and Postmodern Narrative Form in the Novels of Thomas Pynchon

1st Edition

By Shawn Smith
June 16, 2009

First Published in 2005. While many previous books on Pynchon allude to his fictional engagement with historical events and figures, this book explores Pynchon as a historical novelist and, by extension, historical thinker. The book interprets Pynchon's four major novels V., Gravity's Rainbow, ...

Queer Impressions Henry James' Art of Fiction

Queer Impressions: Henry James' Art of Fiction

1st Edition

By Elaine Pigeon
November 16, 2011

Beginning with The Portrait of a Lady , this book shows how, in developing his unique form of realism, James highlights the tragic consequences of his American heroine's Romantic imagination, in particular, her Emersonian idealism. In order to expose Emerson's blind spot, a lacuna at the very ...

Social Dreaming Dickens and the Fairy Tale

Social Dreaming: Dickens and the Fairy Tale

1st Edition

By Elaine Ostry
August 21, 2013

Dickens was known for his incredible imagination and fiery social protest. In Social Dreaming , Elaine Ostry examines how these two qualities are linked through Dickens's use of the fairy tale, a genre that infuses his work. To many Victorians, the fairy tale was not childish: it promoted the ...

Worlding Forster The Passage from Pastoral

Worlding Forster: The Passage from Pastoral

1st Edition

By Stuart Christie
October 25, 2013

Focusing on the literary works and career of British novelist E.M. Forster (1879-1970), this book argues that the writer adapted a much older literary form, the pastoral, to the purposes of writing about modern British experience. The publication points out that Forster's pastoral fiction ...

Colonialism and the Modernist Moment in the Early Novels of Jean Rhys

Colonialism and the Modernist Moment in the Early Novels of Jean Rhys

1st Edition

By Carol Dell'Amico
February 02, 2010

Colonialism and the Modernist Moment in the Early Novels of Jean Rhys explores the postcolonial significance of Rhys’s modernist period work, which depicts an urban scene more varied than that found in other canonical representations of the period. Arguing against the view that Rhys comes into her ...

Whitman's Ecstatic Union Conversion and Ideology in Leaves of Grass

Whitman's Ecstatic Union: Conversion and Ideology in Leaves of Grass

1st Edition

By Michael Sowder
October 23, 2013

Whitman's Ecstatic Union rereads the first three editions of Leaves of Grass within the context of a nineteenth-century antebellum evangelical culture of conversion. Though Whitman intended to write a new American Bible and "inaugurate a religion," contemporary scholarship has often ignored the ...

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