PhD ThesisThis thesis focuses on the US literary left of the 1930s, tracing precursors in pre-WWI anarchism and the bohemian culture of 1920s Greenwich Village, and following the careers of key authors, beyond the Depression, into popular and mainstream culture post-WWII. The free verse of Michael Gold, the ‘proletarian’ novels and short fiction of Robert Cantwell, Tillie Olsen and Erskine Caldwell are read as instances of a kind of modernism from below. As such, they are held up for consideration alongside the more politically conservative modernisms of T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound and D. H. Lawrence, as well as the work of two writers also on the left but more securely situated in the official canon: Ralph Ellison and George Oppen. The emphas...
This PhD dissertation investigates the relationship between literature and rhetoric in the Anglo-Ame...
This dissertation argues that the uniquely pessimistic dimensions of radical politics in late ninete...
This dissertation examines the possibilities for creating social change through literary criticism b...
This dissertation poses a fundamental question: why does a concern about the value of literary writi...
This thesis argues for the relationship between the labour of the modernist poet and changes in work...
This dissertation reconstructs the tradition of “democratic modernism” in the United States from its...
This thesis attempts to answer a puzzling question about the historical trajectory of twentieth-cent...
In the past twenty years, scholars on the Left have attempted to explain a turn to conservatism and ...
This dissertation argues for the importance of works of leftist literary criticism, fiction, and poe...
This dissertation examines late modernist constitutions of literary community and their relationship...
Almost as soon as a certain movement in early twentieth-century American literature began to be labe...
This dissertation argues that American literary postmodernism was profoundly shaped by midcentury in...
This dissertation examines critical efforts to republish and reevaluate 1930s American writers. Foll...
380 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.Writing to Shake the World pr...
This thesis investigates the layered representations of women, their agency, and their class awarene...
This PhD dissertation investigates the relationship between literature and rhetoric in the Anglo-Ame...
This dissertation argues that the uniquely pessimistic dimensions of radical politics in late ninete...
This dissertation examines the possibilities for creating social change through literary criticism b...
This dissertation poses a fundamental question: why does a concern about the value of literary writi...
This thesis argues for the relationship between the labour of the modernist poet and changes in work...
This dissertation reconstructs the tradition of “democratic modernism” in the United States from its...
This thesis attempts to answer a puzzling question about the historical trajectory of twentieth-cent...
In the past twenty years, scholars on the Left have attempted to explain a turn to conservatism and ...
This dissertation argues for the importance of works of leftist literary criticism, fiction, and poe...
This dissertation examines late modernist constitutions of literary community and their relationship...
Almost as soon as a certain movement in early twentieth-century American literature began to be labe...
This dissertation argues that American literary postmodernism was profoundly shaped by midcentury in...
This dissertation examines critical efforts to republish and reevaluate 1930s American writers. Foll...
380 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1998.Writing to Shake the World pr...
This thesis investigates the layered representations of women, their agency, and their class awarene...
This PhD dissertation investigates the relationship between literature and rhetoric in the Anglo-Ame...
This dissertation argues that the uniquely pessimistic dimensions of radical politics in late ninete...
This dissertation examines the possibilities for creating social change through literary criticism b...