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People We Meet in Stories
1950s America
1950s literary landscape
1950s literature
A01=Robert McParland
Atlas Shrugged
Author_Robert McParland
Ayn Rand
Category=DS
character analysis
Dean Moriarty
East of Eden
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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eq_non-fiction
Ernest Hemingway
Fahrenheit 451
fictional characters
Flannery O'Connor
Guy Montague
Holden Caulfield
Invisble Man
Jack Kerouac
James Baldwin
John Steinbeck
literary analysis
literary characters
literary criticism
literature
Lolita
On the Road
Ralph Ellison
Ray Bradbury
Sal Paradise
Santiago
William Faulkner
Product details
- ISBN 9781538130353
- Weight: 562g
- Dimensions: 160 x 230mm
- Publication Date: 20 Oct 2020
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Novels bring us into fictional worlds where we encounter the lives, struggles, and dreams of characters who speak to the underlying pulse of society and social change. In this book, post–World War II America comes alive again as literary critic Robert McParland tilts the rearview mirror to see the characters that captured the imaginations of millions of readers in the most popular and influential novels of the 1950s. This literary era introduced us to Holden Caulfield, Augie March, Lolita, and other antiheroes. Together with popular culture heroes such as Perry Mason and James Bond, they entertained thousands of readers while revealing the underlying currents of ambition, desire, and concern that were central to the American Dream. Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man and James Baldwin’s Go Tell It on the Mountain and Giovanni’sRoom explored racial issues and matters of identity that reverberate still today. The works of Jack Kerouac, the Beat poets Allen Ginsberg and Gregory Corso, and the clever and creative William S. Burroughs and his Naked Lunch challenged conventional perspectives. The People We Meet in Stories will appeal to readers discovering these works for the first time and to those whose tattered paperbacks reveal a long relationship with these key works in American literary history.
Robert McParland is professor of English and chair of the Department of English at Felician University. His books include Beyond Gatsby: How Fitzgerald, Hemingway, and Writers of the 1920s Shaped American Culture, Citizen Steinbeck: Giving Voice to the People, From Native Son to King’s Men[these could, alternately be enclosed in quotation marks and kept italicized]: The Literary Landscape of 1940s America, and Bestseller: A Century of America’s Favorite Books.
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