Reimagining Realism

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19th-century woman writers
ABRAHAM
ALCOTT
ALICE
AMBROSE
American literature
BIERCE
BIPOC
BIPOC writers
BRET
C. C. CHARLES CARROLL
CABLE
CAHAN
Category=DNT
CATHER
Charles Johanningsmeier
CHARLES W.
CHARLOTTE PERKINS
CHESNUTT
CHOPIN
CLEARY
CONSTANCE FENIMORE
CRANE
DAVIS
diversity
DREISER
DUNBAR
DUNBAR NELSON
EDITH
ELIA WILKINSON
eq_anthologies-novellas-short-stories
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
FAR
Fiction
FRANK
FREEMAN
GARLAND
GEORGE WASHINGTON
GILMAN
GOODWIN
GRACE
HAMLIN
HANNAH LLOYD
HARRIET PRESCOTT
HARTE
HEARN
HENRY
HOWELLS
JACK
JAMES
Jessica McCarthy
JEWETT
JOHN
KATE
KATE M.
KING
LAFCADIO
literary naturalism
LONDON
LOUISA MAY
LUCY BATES
MACOMBER
MARIA CRISTINA
MARK SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS
MARY E. WILKINS
MENA
Native American writers
naturalism
NEALL
NORRIS
O. WILLIAM SYDNEY PORTER
OCTAVE ALICE FRENCH
OSKISON
OWEN
PAUL LAURENCE
PEATTIE
REBECCA HARDING
RUTH MCENERY
SAMUEL POST
SARAH ORNE
short stories
SPOFFORD
STEPHEN
STUART
SUI SIN EDITH MAUDE EATON
THANET
THEODORE
TWAIN
WHARTON
WILLA
WILLIAM DEAN
WISTER
women
women writers
WOOLSON
ZITKALA-SA GERTRUDE SIMMONS BONNIN.

Product details

  • ISBN 9780804012379
  • Dimensions: 155 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Nov 2022
  • Publisher: Ohio University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Beginning with one of Louisa May Alcott’s Hospital Sketches, originally published in 1863, this anthology offers a refreshing perspective on American literature from the latter half of the nineteenth century through the first decades of the twentieth. Based on Alcott’s brief stint as a Civil War nurse, Hospital Sketches stands in contrast to the sentimentality of her better-known Little Women and illustrates a blending of romanticism and realism. Furthermore, its thematic focus on the tension between idealized notions of noble, patriotic duty and the horrific reality of war exemplifies a dominant American cultural mindset at the time.
Following this model of complicating accepted ideas about realism and of particular authors, Reimagining Realism brings together dozens of texts that engage with the immense changes and upheavals that characterized American culture over the next six decades: war, abolition, voting rights, westward expansion, immigration, racism and ethnocentrism, industrial production, labor reforms, transportation, urban growth, journalism, mass media, education, and economic disparity.
Reimagining Realism presents a collection of works much more diverse than what is typically found in other anthologies of short fiction from this era. Some selections are lesser-known works by familiar authors that enable readers to see dimensions of these authors that are rarely considered but deserve further study. The book also features authors from many previously underrepresented groups and includes some outstanding works by authors whose names are almost completely unknown to today’s readers-but which deserve greater attention.
The volume’s editors, in their intent to spur readers to further reimagine realism, to represent the spectrum of viewpoints prevalent during this era, and to spark critical thinking and productive discussion, have been careful not to apply any type of political litmus test to the included works. They have also refrained from categorizing works according to convention, so as not to predispose readers to restrictive interpretations, and have provided only brief, highly readable headnotes and annotations that will help readers better understand the texts.

Charles A. Johanningsmeier is a professor of English and Isaacson Chair at the University of Nebraska Omaha. As a print historian, his chief research interests have involved assessing how readers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries interacted with fiction texts published in various periodicals by authors such as Frank Norris, Stephen Crane, Sui Sin Far, Sarah Orne Jewett, Charles Chesnutt, Mary Wilkins Freeman, Henry James, and Willa Cather.

Jessica E. McCarthy is a lecturer at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. She has published on Edith Wharton, Ellen Glasgow, and American literary naturalism.