In the early twentieth century, a time of massive population shifts from external immigration and internal migration, the question of whose voices would be heard—both politically and aesthetically—became central to American politics and culture, and authors found new and innovative ways of representing those voices on the page. Yet these textual transcriptions of speech and song are typically considered either as nostalgic representations of a folk past, or as exhibits of populations whose language is marked as non-standard. This dissertation argues that vocal production is in fact a progressive and future-oriented force in American modernist texts, and finds a pedagogical potential in formal innovations that often encouraged readers to the...
A radical understanding of modernist medium-specificity would seem to account for Stein’s early aban...
"Ears Taut to Hear" investigates the sustained engagement between American literature and sound repr...
By the early twentieth century, America had become enamored with standards. Desiring industrial, ec...
In the early twentieth century, a time of massive population shifts from external immigration and in...
Taking Gertrude Stein's The Making of Americans (1925) as my central example, I show how modernism i...
Literary salons were a vital part of modernist culture. Although scholars have called attention to t...
Historians have widely studied and discussed the Progressive era in the United States, including the...
I argue the process of institutionalizing linguistic stereotypes began as authors during the ninetee...
By analyzing scenes of instruction and the instructive literary techniques of Anzia Yezierska’s Brea...
This dissertation registers the attempts of modern novelists to make the printed word resound, to ma...
This PhD dissertation investigates the relationship between literature and rhetoric in the Anglo-Ame...
textThis dissertation examines Gertrude Stein’s Three Lives, several works by Alice Corbin Henderso...
This thesis argues for the relationship between the labour of the modernist poet and changes in work...
This dissertation examines late modernist constitutions of literary community and their relationship...
Gertrude Stein (Allegheny, Pennsylvania, 1874 – Paris, 1946) is a central figure of American moderni...
A radical understanding of modernist medium-specificity would seem to account for Stein’s early aban...
"Ears Taut to Hear" investigates the sustained engagement between American literature and sound repr...
By the early twentieth century, America had become enamored with standards. Desiring industrial, ec...
In the early twentieth century, a time of massive population shifts from external immigration and in...
Taking Gertrude Stein's The Making of Americans (1925) as my central example, I show how modernism i...
Literary salons were a vital part of modernist culture. Although scholars have called attention to t...
Historians have widely studied and discussed the Progressive era in the United States, including the...
I argue the process of institutionalizing linguistic stereotypes began as authors during the ninetee...
By analyzing scenes of instruction and the instructive literary techniques of Anzia Yezierska’s Brea...
This dissertation registers the attempts of modern novelists to make the printed word resound, to ma...
This PhD dissertation investigates the relationship between literature and rhetoric in the Anglo-Ame...
textThis dissertation examines Gertrude Stein’s Three Lives, several works by Alice Corbin Henderso...
This thesis argues for the relationship between the labour of the modernist poet and changes in work...
This dissertation examines late modernist constitutions of literary community and their relationship...
Gertrude Stein (Allegheny, Pennsylvania, 1874 – Paris, 1946) is a central figure of American moderni...
A radical understanding of modernist medium-specificity would seem to account for Stein’s early aban...
"Ears Taut to Hear" investigates the sustained engagement between American literature and sound repr...
By the early twentieth century, America had become enamored with standards. Desiring industrial, ec...