A History of American Literature and Culture of the First World War
Herausgeber: Dayton, Tim; Wienen, Mark W van
A History of American Literature and Culture of the First World War
Herausgeber: Dayton, Tim; Wienen, Mark W van
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This book explores American literature and culture of the First World War while analyzing the war's historical context and significance.
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This book explores American literature and culture of the First World War while analyzing the war's historical context and significance.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 466
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 160mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 794g
- ISBN-13: 9781108475327
- ISBN-10: 1108475329
- Artikelnr.: 60065492
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 466
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Februar 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 160mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 794g
- ISBN-13: 9781108475327
- ISBN-10: 1108475329
- Artikelnr.: 60065492
Introduction. America's Great War at one hundred (and counting) Tim Dayton
and Mark W. Van Wienen; Part I. Genre and Medium: 1. Poetry: hegemonic
vistas Tim Dayton; 2. Fiction: a war remembered Scott D. Emmert; 3. Film:
mostly classical Hollywood cinema goes to war and sometimes brings it home
Leslie DeBauche; 4. Drama: from literary fantasy to gritty realism Brenda
Murphy; 5. Popular music: tin pan alley as national barometer John Roger
Paas; 6. Journalism: adventure and reckoning Joe Hayden; 7. Memoirs:
negotiating the great war's social memory Ian Andrew Isherwood; 8. Art and
illustration: modes of visual persuasion David M. Lubin; Part II. Settings
and Subjects: 9. The peace movement: rapid development, women's leadership,
regional diversity Kathleen Brown; 10. Americans in France: women writers
and international responsibility Jennifer Haytock; 11. German Americans:
dual loyalties and poetic adaptations of 'The watch on the Rhine' Lorie
Vanchena; 12. The English in America: cultural propaganda and its agents
Alisa Miller; 13. Preparedness: Theodore Roosevelt, Leonard Wood, and
rookie rhymes Adam Szetela; 14. Propaganda: martialing media Pearl James;
15. Conscientious objectors: conscience, courage, and resistance Scott H.
Bennett; 16. Volunteers: ambulance and nursing narratives Hazel Hutchison;
17. African Americans: defining freedom, citizenship, and patriotism
Françoise N. Hamlin; 18. In the Midwest: 'Borne back ceaselessly into the
past' David Rennie; 19. In the south: three Mississippi writers and the
Great War mobilization David A. Davis; 20. Revolution: winning the world,
losing the (middle) way Mark W. Van Wienen; 21. Monuments and memorials:
memory dissipated Mark Levitch; Part III. Transformations: 22. The nation:
forging one, finding many Jonathan Vincent; 23. Free speech: 'clear and
present danger' Ernest Freeberg; 24. Labour: from replaceable cogs to
corporate citizens Thomas Mackaman; 25. The veteran: parades, bitter
homecomings, and fictions of the doughboy's return Steven Trout; 26. The
military-industrial complex: practices, precedents, and literary
engagements Mark Whalan; 27. The world: race, red-baiting, and the
Wilsonian century Alexander Anievas.
and Mark W. Van Wienen; Part I. Genre and Medium: 1. Poetry: hegemonic
vistas Tim Dayton; 2. Fiction: a war remembered Scott D. Emmert; 3. Film:
mostly classical Hollywood cinema goes to war and sometimes brings it home
Leslie DeBauche; 4. Drama: from literary fantasy to gritty realism Brenda
Murphy; 5. Popular music: tin pan alley as national barometer John Roger
Paas; 6. Journalism: adventure and reckoning Joe Hayden; 7. Memoirs:
negotiating the great war's social memory Ian Andrew Isherwood; 8. Art and
illustration: modes of visual persuasion David M. Lubin; Part II. Settings
and Subjects: 9. The peace movement: rapid development, women's leadership,
regional diversity Kathleen Brown; 10. Americans in France: women writers
and international responsibility Jennifer Haytock; 11. German Americans:
dual loyalties and poetic adaptations of 'The watch on the Rhine' Lorie
Vanchena; 12. The English in America: cultural propaganda and its agents
Alisa Miller; 13. Preparedness: Theodore Roosevelt, Leonard Wood, and
rookie rhymes Adam Szetela; 14. Propaganda: martialing media Pearl James;
15. Conscientious objectors: conscience, courage, and resistance Scott H.
Bennett; 16. Volunteers: ambulance and nursing narratives Hazel Hutchison;
17. African Americans: defining freedom, citizenship, and patriotism
Françoise N. Hamlin; 18. In the Midwest: 'Borne back ceaselessly into the
past' David Rennie; 19. In the south: three Mississippi writers and the
Great War mobilization David A. Davis; 20. Revolution: winning the world,
losing the (middle) way Mark W. Van Wienen; 21. Monuments and memorials:
memory dissipated Mark Levitch; Part III. Transformations: 22. The nation:
forging one, finding many Jonathan Vincent; 23. Free speech: 'clear and
present danger' Ernest Freeberg; 24. Labour: from replaceable cogs to
corporate citizens Thomas Mackaman; 25. The veteran: parades, bitter
homecomings, and fictions of the doughboy's return Steven Trout; 26. The
military-industrial complex: practices, precedents, and literary
engagements Mark Whalan; 27. The world: race, red-baiting, and the
Wilsonian century Alexander Anievas.
Introduction. America's Great War at one hundred (and counting) Tim Dayton
and Mark W. Van Wienen; Part I. Genre and Medium: 1. Poetry: hegemonic
vistas Tim Dayton; 2. Fiction: a war remembered Scott D. Emmert; 3. Film:
mostly classical Hollywood cinema goes to war and sometimes brings it home
Leslie DeBauche; 4. Drama: from literary fantasy to gritty realism Brenda
Murphy; 5. Popular music: tin pan alley as national barometer John Roger
Paas; 6. Journalism: adventure and reckoning Joe Hayden; 7. Memoirs:
negotiating the great war's social memory Ian Andrew Isherwood; 8. Art and
illustration: modes of visual persuasion David M. Lubin; Part II. Settings
and Subjects: 9. The peace movement: rapid development, women's leadership,
regional diversity Kathleen Brown; 10. Americans in France: women writers
and international responsibility Jennifer Haytock; 11. German Americans:
dual loyalties and poetic adaptations of 'The watch on the Rhine' Lorie
Vanchena; 12. The English in America: cultural propaganda and its agents
Alisa Miller; 13. Preparedness: Theodore Roosevelt, Leonard Wood, and
rookie rhymes Adam Szetela; 14. Propaganda: martialing media Pearl James;
15. Conscientious objectors: conscience, courage, and resistance Scott H.
Bennett; 16. Volunteers: ambulance and nursing narratives Hazel Hutchison;
17. African Americans: defining freedom, citizenship, and patriotism
Françoise N. Hamlin; 18. In the Midwest: 'Borne back ceaselessly into the
past' David Rennie; 19. In the south: three Mississippi writers and the
Great War mobilization David A. Davis; 20. Revolution: winning the world,
losing the (middle) way Mark W. Van Wienen; 21. Monuments and memorials:
memory dissipated Mark Levitch; Part III. Transformations: 22. The nation:
forging one, finding many Jonathan Vincent; 23. Free speech: 'clear and
present danger' Ernest Freeberg; 24. Labour: from replaceable cogs to
corporate citizens Thomas Mackaman; 25. The veteran: parades, bitter
homecomings, and fictions of the doughboy's return Steven Trout; 26. The
military-industrial complex: practices, precedents, and literary
engagements Mark Whalan; 27. The world: race, red-baiting, and the
Wilsonian century Alexander Anievas.
and Mark W. Van Wienen; Part I. Genre and Medium: 1. Poetry: hegemonic
vistas Tim Dayton; 2. Fiction: a war remembered Scott D. Emmert; 3. Film:
mostly classical Hollywood cinema goes to war and sometimes brings it home
Leslie DeBauche; 4. Drama: from literary fantasy to gritty realism Brenda
Murphy; 5. Popular music: tin pan alley as national barometer John Roger
Paas; 6. Journalism: adventure and reckoning Joe Hayden; 7. Memoirs:
negotiating the great war's social memory Ian Andrew Isherwood; 8. Art and
illustration: modes of visual persuasion David M. Lubin; Part II. Settings
and Subjects: 9. The peace movement: rapid development, women's leadership,
regional diversity Kathleen Brown; 10. Americans in France: women writers
and international responsibility Jennifer Haytock; 11. German Americans:
dual loyalties and poetic adaptations of 'The watch on the Rhine' Lorie
Vanchena; 12. The English in America: cultural propaganda and its agents
Alisa Miller; 13. Preparedness: Theodore Roosevelt, Leonard Wood, and
rookie rhymes Adam Szetela; 14. Propaganda: martialing media Pearl James;
15. Conscientious objectors: conscience, courage, and resistance Scott H.
Bennett; 16. Volunteers: ambulance and nursing narratives Hazel Hutchison;
17. African Americans: defining freedom, citizenship, and patriotism
Françoise N. Hamlin; 18. In the Midwest: 'Borne back ceaselessly into the
past' David Rennie; 19. In the south: three Mississippi writers and the
Great War mobilization David A. Davis; 20. Revolution: winning the world,
losing the (middle) way Mark W. Van Wienen; 21. Monuments and memorials:
memory dissipated Mark Levitch; Part III. Transformations: 22. The nation:
forging one, finding many Jonathan Vincent; 23. Free speech: 'clear and
present danger' Ernest Freeberg; 24. Labour: from replaceable cogs to
corporate citizens Thomas Mackaman; 25. The veteran: parades, bitter
homecomings, and fictions of the doughboy's return Steven Trout; 26. The
military-industrial complex: practices, precedents, and literary
engagements Mark Whalan; 27. The world: race, red-baiting, and the
Wilsonian century Alexander Anievas.