New Orleans
Herausgeber: Johnson, T. R.
New Orleans
Herausgeber: Johnson, T. R.
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A comprehensive literary history of New Orleans, one of the most storied cities in the world.
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A comprehensive literary history of New Orleans, one of the most storied cities in the world.
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: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 728g
- ISBN-13: 9781108498197
- ISBN-10: 1108498191
- Artikelnr.: 56033609
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 400
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 728g
- ISBN-13: 9781108498197
- ISBN-10: 1108498191
- Artikelnr.: 56033609
Preface T. R. Johnson; 1. Swamp City Anthony Wilson; 2. Mixed motives:
writing for French audiences from colonial New Orleans Erin Greenwald; 3.
'As I have seen and known it': ex-slave autobiographers and the New Orleans
Slave Market Calvin Schermerhorn; 4. What New Orleans Meant to Walt Whitman
Ed Folsom; 5. Coloring sex, love, and desire in Creole New Orleans's long
nineteenth century Jarrod Hayes; 6. The white Creole tradition: Alfred
Mercier, Charles Gayarré, Adrien Rouquette, and Grace King Rien Fertel; 7.
The Civil War's literary aftershocks: George Washington Cable Matthew
Smith; 8. Illusion and disillusion: the making of Lafcadio Hearn S.
Frederick Starr; 9. Local color, social problems, and the living dead in
the late nineteenth-century short fiction of Alice Dunbar-Nelson Tara T.
Green; 10. Kate Chopin, Edna Pontellier, and the predicament of the
intellectual woman in New Orleans Emily Toth; 11. Converging Americas: New
Orleans in Spanish-language and Latina/o/x literary culture Kirsten Silva
Greusz; 12. A Jazz origin-myth: Bras Coupe in history, folklore, and
literature Bryan Wagner; 13. 'Stepping out' of the storyville frame: recent
literary representations of the New Orleans red light district Milena
Marinkova; 14. Louis Armstrong's autobiographical art Daniel Stein; 15. New
Orleans, modernism, and The Double Dealer, 1921-1926 Thomas Bonner; 16.
'Because what else could he have hoped to find in New Orleans, if not the
truth': William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom! Thadious Davis; 17. 'The place
I was made for': Tennessee Williams in New Orleans Henry I. Schvey; 18. A
Civil Rights era novel of the American Civil War: Robert Penn Warren's Band
of Angels William Bedford Clark; 19. How to survive the best environments:
narrating Protean place in Walker Percy's The Moviegoer Richmond M. Eustis,
Jr; 20. Tom Dent and the development of black literature in New Orleans
Kalamu Ya Salaam; 21. The gothic tradition in New Orleans Taylor Hagood;
22. A Flaneur in the French Quarter and beyond: John Kennedy Toole's
Confederacy of Dunces Cory MacLauchlin; 23. Literary fiction by New Orleans
women, 1961-2003: Shirley Anne Grau, Ellen Gilchrest, Sheila Bosworth, and
Valerie Martin Monica Carol Miller; 24. Asian American New Orleans
Marguerite Nguyen; 25. New Orleans rap and bounce: recovering and archiving
an expressive tradition Holly Hobbs; 26. The literature of Hurricane
Katrina Kevin Rabalais; Afterword: swan song? T. R. Johnson; Contributors
biographies; Index.
writing for French audiences from colonial New Orleans Erin Greenwald; 3.
'As I have seen and known it': ex-slave autobiographers and the New Orleans
Slave Market Calvin Schermerhorn; 4. What New Orleans Meant to Walt Whitman
Ed Folsom; 5. Coloring sex, love, and desire in Creole New Orleans's long
nineteenth century Jarrod Hayes; 6. The white Creole tradition: Alfred
Mercier, Charles Gayarré, Adrien Rouquette, and Grace King Rien Fertel; 7.
The Civil War's literary aftershocks: George Washington Cable Matthew
Smith; 8. Illusion and disillusion: the making of Lafcadio Hearn S.
Frederick Starr; 9. Local color, social problems, and the living dead in
the late nineteenth-century short fiction of Alice Dunbar-Nelson Tara T.
Green; 10. Kate Chopin, Edna Pontellier, and the predicament of the
intellectual woman in New Orleans Emily Toth; 11. Converging Americas: New
Orleans in Spanish-language and Latina/o/x literary culture Kirsten Silva
Greusz; 12. A Jazz origin-myth: Bras Coupe in history, folklore, and
literature Bryan Wagner; 13. 'Stepping out' of the storyville frame: recent
literary representations of the New Orleans red light district Milena
Marinkova; 14. Louis Armstrong's autobiographical art Daniel Stein; 15. New
Orleans, modernism, and The Double Dealer, 1921-1926 Thomas Bonner; 16.
'Because what else could he have hoped to find in New Orleans, if not the
truth': William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom! Thadious Davis; 17. 'The place
I was made for': Tennessee Williams in New Orleans Henry I. Schvey; 18. A
Civil Rights era novel of the American Civil War: Robert Penn Warren's Band
of Angels William Bedford Clark; 19. How to survive the best environments:
narrating Protean place in Walker Percy's The Moviegoer Richmond M. Eustis,
Jr; 20. Tom Dent and the development of black literature in New Orleans
Kalamu Ya Salaam; 21. The gothic tradition in New Orleans Taylor Hagood;
22. A Flaneur in the French Quarter and beyond: John Kennedy Toole's
Confederacy of Dunces Cory MacLauchlin; 23. Literary fiction by New Orleans
women, 1961-2003: Shirley Anne Grau, Ellen Gilchrest, Sheila Bosworth, and
Valerie Martin Monica Carol Miller; 24. Asian American New Orleans
Marguerite Nguyen; 25. New Orleans rap and bounce: recovering and archiving
an expressive tradition Holly Hobbs; 26. The literature of Hurricane
Katrina Kevin Rabalais; Afterword: swan song? T. R. Johnson; Contributors
biographies; Index.
Preface T. R. Johnson; 1. Swamp City Anthony Wilson; 2. Mixed motives:
writing for French audiences from colonial New Orleans Erin Greenwald; 3.
'As I have seen and known it': ex-slave autobiographers and the New Orleans
Slave Market Calvin Schermerhorn; 4. What New Orleans Meant to Walt Whitman
Ed Folsom; 5. Coloring sex, love, and desire in Creole New Orleans's long
nineteenth century Jarrod Hayes; 6. The white Creole tradition: Alfred
Mercier, Charles Gayarré, Adrien Rouquette, and Grace King Rien Fertel; 7.
The Civil War's literary aftershocks: George Washington Cable Matthew
Smith; 8. Illusion and disillusion: the making of Lafcadio Hearn S.
Frederick Starr; 9. Local color, social problems, and the living dead in
the late nineteenth-century short fiction of Alice Dunbar-Nelson Tara T.
Green; 10. Kate Chopin, Edna Pontellier, and the predicament of the
intellectual woman in New Orleans Emily Toth; 11. Converging Americas: New
Orleans in Spanish-language and Latina/o/x literary culture Kirsten Silva
Greusz; 12. A Jazz origin-myth: Bras Coupe in history, folklore, and
literature Bryan Wagner; 13. 'Stepping out' of the storyville frame: recent
literary representations of the New Orleans red light district Milena
Marinkova; 14. Louis Armstrong's autobiographical art Daniel Stein; 15. New
Orleans, modernism, and The Double Dealer, 1921-1926 Thomas Bonner; 16.
'Because what else could he have hoped to find in New Orleans, if not the
truth': William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom! Thadious Davis; 17. 'The place
I was made for': Tennessee Williams in New Orleans Henry I. Schvey; 18. A
Civil Rights era novel of the American Civil War: Robert Penn Warren's Band
of Angels William Bedford Clark; 19. How to survive the best environments:
narrating Protean place in Walker Percy's The Moviegoer Richmond M. Eustis,
Jr; 20. Tom Dent and the development of black literature in New Orleans
Kalamu Ya Salaam; 21. The gothic tradition in New Orleans Taylor Hagood;
22. A Flaneur in the French Quarter and beyond: John Kennedy Toole's
Confederacy of Dunces Cory MacLauchlin; 23. Literary fiction by New Orleans
women, 1961-2003: Shirley Anne Grau, Ellen Gilchrest, Sheila Bosworth, and
Valerie Martin Monica Carol Miller; 24. Asian American New Orleans
Marguerite Nguyen; 25. New Orleans rap and bounce: recovering and archiving
an expressive tradition Holly Hobbs; 26. The literature of Hurricane
Katrina Kevin Rabalais; Afterword: swan song? T. R. Johnson; Contributors
biographies; Index.
writing for French audiences from colonial New Orleans Erin Greenwald; 3.
'As I have seen and known it': ex-slave autobiographers and the New Orleans
Slave Market Calvin Schermerhorn; 4. What New Orleans Meant to Walt Whitman
Ed Folsom; 5. Coloring sex, love, and desire in Creole New Orleans's long
nineteenth century Jarrod Hayes; 6. The white Creole tradition: Alfred
Mercier, Charles Gayarré, Adrien Rouquette, and Grace King Rien Fertel; 7.
The Civil War's literary aftershocks: George Washington Cable Matthew
Smith; 8. Illusion and disillusion: the making of Lafcadio Hearn S.
Frederick Starr; 9. Local color, social problems, and the living dead in
the late nineteenth-century short fiction of Alice Dunbar-Nelson Tara T.
Green; 10. Kate Chopin, Edna Pontellier, and the predicament of the
intellectual woman in New Orleans Emily Toth; 11. Converging Americas: New
Orleans in Spanish-language and Latina/o/x literary culture Kirsten Silva
Greusz; 12. A Jazz origin-myth: Bras Coupe in history, folklore, and
literature Bryan Wagner; 13. 'Stepping out' of the storyville frame: recent
literary representations of the New Orleans red light district Milena
Marinkova; 14. Louis Armstrong's autobiographical art Daniel Stein; 15. New
Orleans, modernism, and The Double Dealer, 1921-1926 Thomas Bonner; 16.
'Because what else could he have hoped to find in New Orleans, if not the
truth': William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom! Thadious Davis; 17. 'The place
I was made for': Tennessee Williams in New Orleans Henry I. Schvey; 18. A
Civil Rights era novel of the American Civil War: Robert Penn Warren's Band
of Angels William Bedford Clark; 19. How to survive the best environments:
narrating Protean place in Walker Percy's The Moviegoer Richmond M. Eustis,
Jr; 20. Tom Dent and the development of black literature in New Orleans
Kalamu Ya Salaam; 21. The gothic tradition in New Orleans Taylor Hagood;
22. A Flaneur in the French Quarter and beyond: John Kennedy Toole's
Confederacy of Dunces Cory MacLauchlin; 23. Literary fiction by New Orleans
women, 1961-2003: Shirley Anne Grau, Ellen Gilchrest, Sheila Bosworth, and
Valerie Martin Monica Carol Miller; 24. Asian American New Orleans
Marguerite Nguyen; 25. New Orleans rap and bounce: recovering and archiving
an expressive tradition Holly Hobbs; 26. The literature of Hurricane
Katrina Kevin Rabalais; Afterword: swan song? T. R. Johnson; Contributors
biographies; Index.