The Radical Novel and the Classless Society analyzes radical U.S. literature from the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries through the lens of socialist thought, recognition theory, and intersectionality theory.
The Radical Novel and the Classless Society analyzes radical U.S. literature from the late nineteenth to the mid-twentieth centuries through the lens of socialist thought, recognition theory, and intersectionality theory.
Introduction. The Radical Novel and Socialism: Utopian and Scientific Chapter One. The Radical Novel: Utopian and Scientific Chapter Two. Recognition as Classless Society: Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, Hegel's Chapter Three. The Family as Trope of Recognition in the Utopian Novel: Bellamy, Howells, and Gilman Chapter Four. The Convergence of Family and Criminal in the Proletarian Novel: Steinbeck and Wright Chapter Five. The Rabble, or, The Prefiguration of the Classless Society in Le Sueur and McKay Chapter Six. The Divided People, or Classless Society and Agent of History: Donnelly, Griggs, and Ellison Conclusion. A Dialectic of Organizing and Art
Introduction. The Radical Novel and Socialism: Utopian and Scientific Chapter One. The Radical Novel: Utopian and Scientific Chapter Two. Recognition as Classless Society: Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, Hegel's Chapter Three. The Family as Trope of Recognition in the Utopian Novel: Bellamy, Howells, and Gilman Chapter Four. The Convergence of Family and Criminal in the Proletarian Novel: Steinbeck and Wright Chapter Five. The Rabble, or, The Prefiguration of the Classless Society in Le Sueur and McKay Chapter Six. The Divided People, or Classless Society and Agent of History: Donnelly, Griggs, and Ellison Conclusion. A Dialectic of Organizing and Art
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