Patriotic Gore

Patriotic Gore
Title Patriotic Gore PDF eBook
Author Edmund Wilson
Publisher Macmillan + ORM
Pages 754
Release 2019-11-12
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1466899638

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Featuring critical and biographical portraits of notable figures of the American Civil War, Patriotic Gore remains one of Edmund Wilson's greatest achievements. Considered one of the 100 Best Nonfiction books by The Modern Library. Figures discussed include Harriet Beecher Stowe, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, and Oliver Wendell Holmes, among many others.

Patriotic Gore

Patriotic Gore
Title Patriotic Gore PDF eBook
Author Edmund Wilson
Publisher W. W. Norton & Company
Pages 852
Release 1994
Genre History
ISBN 9780393312560

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Regarded by many critics as Edmund Wilson's greatest book, Patriotic Gore brilliantly portrays the vast political, spiritual, and material crisis of the Civil War as reflected in the lives and writings of some thirty representative Americans.

Patriotic Gore

Patriotic Gore
Title Patriotic Gore PDF eBook
Author Edmund Wilson
Publisher
Pages 816
Release 1984
Genre
ISBN

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Patriotic Gore

Patriotic Gore
Title Patriotic Gore PDF eBook
Author Edmund Wilson
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 1984
Genre
ISBN

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Classics and Commercials

Classics and Commercials
Title Classics and Commercials PDF eBook
Author Edmund Wilson
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Pages 534
Release 2019-11-12
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0374600260

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A History of American Civil War Literature

A History of American Civil War Literature
Title A History of American Civil War Literature PDF eBook
Author Coleman Hutchison
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 639
Release 2015-12-01
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 1316432416

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This book is the first omnibus history of the literature of the American Civil War, the deadliest conflict in US history. A History of American Civil War Literature examines the way in which the war has been remembered and rewritten over time in prose, poems, and other narratives. This history incorporates new directions in Civil War historiography and cultural studies while giving equal attention to writings from both northern and southern states. It redresses the traditional neglect of southern literary cultures by moving between the North and the South, thus finding a balance between Union and Confederate texts. Written by leading scholars in the field, this book works to redefine the boundaries of American Civil War literature while posing a fundamental question: why does this 150-year-old conflict continue to capture the American imagination?

Edmund Wilson's America

Edmund Wilson's America
Title Edmund Wilson's America PDF eBook
Author George H. Douglas
Publisher University Press of Kentucky
Pages 337
Release 2021-11-21
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 0813187745

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When Edmund Wilson died in 1972 he was widely acclaimed as one of America's great literary critics. But it was often forgotten by many of his admirers that he was also a brilliant and penetrating critic of American life. In a literary career spanning half a century, Wilson commented on nearly every aspect of the American experience, and he produced a body of work on the subject that rivals those of Tocqueville and Henry Adams. In this book, George H. Douglas has distilled the essence from Wilson's many writings on America. An active reporter and journalist as much as a scholar, Wilson ranged from Harding to Nixon, from bathtub gin to marijuana. Douglas here surveys Wilson's mordant observations on the roaring twenties, the Great Depression, income tax, suburbia, sex, populist politics, the Vietnam War, the Great Society, the failure of American scholarship, pollution of the landscape, and the breakdown of traditional American values. The Wilson who emerges from this survey is a historical writer with deep and unshakable roots in Jeffersonian democracy. Among his most far-seeing and poignant books are studies of the literature of the American Civil War and of the treatment of the American Indian. Pained by the crumbling moral order, Wilson was never completely at home in the twentieth century. In politics he was neither a liberal nor a conservative as those terms are understood today. He endured those ideologies and their adherents, but his genius was that he could bring them into hard focus from the perspective of the traditional American individualist who was too pained to accept the standardized commercial world that had grown up around him. Edmund Wilson's America offers a distinctive overview of the nation's life and culture as seen and judged by its leading man of letters.