In Thomas Wolfe’s 1940 novel You Can’t Go Home Again, the main character, George Webber, writes a novel that depicts his hometown is part of his home community. More than simply a case of vigilante exclusion, Webber\u27s severed connection with his hometown is part of his exploration of a changing America, about the relationship between city and country and the tensions that surround a rapidly urbanizing country. This nostalgic disconnect has entered our lexicon to refer to the line between those who have moved to the “sophisticated” metropolis from the rural backwater (or perhaps now the bucolic suburb or exurb), and for whom a return, as Susan Matt has suggested, might constitute a failure (Matt 2007)
The themes of suburbanization and placelessness arise in many of Yates’ novels, exposing the continu...
In Country Life Within City Reach, I explore the process by which text-fueled reveries of clerks tra...
Seven years is a long time to be away from home. For Thomas Wolfe, it must not have seemed long enou...
In Thomas Wolfe’s 1940 novel You Can’t Go Home Again, the main character, George Webber, writes a no...
Address to the Thomas Wolfe Society, Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting, 25 May 2013, Boise, Idaho. In the ...
Suburbia is a familiar topos in Australian fiction. Its address to colonisation is mostly oblique, y...
This thesis discusses the effects, primarily on a person’s identity, caused by rural to urban migrat...
It is in our nature as humans to want for a home, a point of origin to start from and safe place to ...
As I grew older there was summer farm work, college, the army, graduate school, a family, and academ...
My PhD engages with a number of recent works of fiction in order to understand how American literatu...
Remember when Americans had hometowns? Where are you from? we\u27d ask one another. And the answer...
Sebastian Barry is most notable for using his ancestors as the main characters in his novel. He take...
Randolph Stow’s ‘English’ novels, The Girl Green as Elderflower (1980) and The Suburbs of Hell (1984...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.In this collection of linked sh...
With the increasing rate at which people move between communities of place, not everyone experiences...
The themes of suburbanization and placelessness arise in many of Yates’ novels, exposing the continu...
In Country Life Within City Reach, I explore the process by which text-fueled reveries of clerks tra...
Seven years is a long time to be away from home. For Thomas Wolfe, it must not have seemed long enou...
In Thomas Wolfe’s 1940 novel You Can’t Go Home Again, the main character, George Webber, writes a no...
Address to the Thomas Wolfe Society, Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting, 25 May 2013, Boise, Idaho. In the ...
Suburbia is a familiar topos in Australian fiction. Its address to colonisation is mostly oblique, y...
This thesis discusses the effects, primarily on a person’s identity, caused by rural to urban migrat...
It is in our nature as humans to want for a home, a point of origin to start from and safe place to ...
As I grew older there was summer farm work, college, the army, graduate school, a family, and academ...
My PhD engages with a number of recent works of fiction in order to understand how American literatu...
Remember when Americans had hometowns? Where are you from? we\u27d ask one another. And the answer...
Sebastian Barry is most notable for using his ancestors as the main characters in his novel. He take...
Randolph Stow’s ‘English’ novels, The Girl Green as Elderflower (1980) and The Suburbs of Hell (1984...
Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only.In this collection of linked sh...
With the increasing rate at which people move between communities of place, not everyone experiences...
The themes of suburbanization and placelessness arise in many of Yates’ novels, exposing the continu...
In Country Life Within City Reach, I explore the process by which text-fueled reveries of clerks tra...
Seven years is a long time to be away from home. For Thomas Wolfe, it must not have seemed long enou...