A Historical Guide to Herman Melville [ electronic resource ] / by Giles Gunn.
By: Gunn, Giles.
Material type: TextPublisher: Oxford: Oxford Scholarship Online, 2011ISBN: 9780199850297 ( e-book ).Subject(s): EnglishGenre/Form: Electronic booksDDC classification: 813.3 Online resources: https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195142822.001.0001 View to click Summary: This book gathers together original essays dealing with Herman Melville's relations with his historical era, with class, with the marketplace, with ethnic cosmopolitanism, and with religion. These essays are framed by a new, short biography, an introduction, an illustrated chronology, and a bibliographical essay. Taken together, these pieces afford a fresh and searching set of perspectives on Melville's connections both with his own age and also with our own. This book makes the case, as does no other collection of criticism of its size, for Melville's commanding centrality to nineteenth-century American literature.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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E-Book | WWW | 813.3 GUN/H (Browse shelf) | Available | EB288 |
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813.09 SEN/O The origins of Faulkner`s art / | 813.3 BLO/H Herman Melville`s Moby-Dick / | 813.3 DES/N Nathaniel Hawthorne / | 813.3 GUN/H A Historical Guide to Herman Melville [ electronic resource ] / | 813.3 HAW/S The Scarlet letter : an autoritative text essays in criticism and scholarship / | 813.3 HAW/S The scarlet letter / | 813.3 HAY/C The Cambridge introduction to Herman Melville / |
This book gathers together original essays dealing with Herman Melville's relations with his historical era, with class, with the marketplace, with ethnic cosmopolitanism, and with religion. These essays are framed by a new, short biography, an introduction, an illustrated chronology, and a bibliographical essay. Taken together, these pieces afford a fresh and searching set of perspectives on Melville's connections both with his own age and also with our own. This book makes the case, as does no other collection of criticism of its size, for Melville's commanding centrality to nineteenth-century American literature.
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