All the essays are informed by that broad sociological view of literature that caused Q. D. Leavis to ask how the novel rose and why it flourished.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Sources and Acknowledgements Editor's introduction 1. The American Novel 2. Hawthorne as poet 3. Melville: the 1853-6 phase 4. Henry James and the disabilities of the American novelist in the nineteenth century 5. James, Trollope and the American-English confrontation theme 6. A note on literary indebtedness: Dickens, George, Eliot, Henry James 7. The fox is the novelist's idea: Henry James and the house beautiful 8. Henry James: the stories 9. The institution of Henry James 10. Henry James's heiress: the importance of Edith Wharton 11. Edith Wharton: The House of Mirth 12. The French novel 13. The Russian novel 14. The Italian novel Notes.
Sources and Acknowledgements Editor's introduction 1. The American Novel 2. Hawthorne as poet 3. Melville: the 1853-6 phase 4. Henry James and the disabilities of the American novelist in the nineteenth century 5. James, Trollope and the American-English confrontation theme 6. A note on literary indebtedness: Dickens, George, Eliot, Henry James 7. The fox is the novelist's idea: Henry James and the house beautiful 8. Henry James: the stories 9. The institution of Henry James 10. Henry James's heiress: the importance of Edith Wharton 11. Edith Wharton: The House of Mirth 12. The French novel 13. The Russian novel 14. The Italian novel Notes.
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