20th Century American Literature: A Soviet View.

1978 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 138
Author(s):  
Robert E. Spiller ◽  
Y. Kovalev ◽  
Ronald Vroon
1981 ◽  
Vol 89 (5) ◽  
pp. 797-799 ◽  
Author(s):  
Burger Zapf ◽  
William B. Lehmann ◽  
G. Gordon Snyder

An extremely rare laryngeal hamartoma causing inspiratory stridor in a 6-week-old infant is reported and the histology discussed. The tumor is benign and responds to simple excision. No other cases have been found in the 20th century American literature.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dr. K. Usha Rani

Abstract Ernest Miller Hemingway is acknowledged as the most significant writer of the 20th century American literature. No other American writer has ever equaled the popular success and worldwide reputation off Ernest Hemingway. His prose style is universally recognized as one of the innovative of 20th century literature. Hemingway writes of what he knows of his own experience. His writings are honest, direct and clear. The aim of the present study is to make a comprehensive analysis of alienation in the selected novels of Ernest Hemingway. The causes of alienation are enumerated by extracting the influencing factors like anxiety, despair, loneliness etc. The consequences of alienation are studied. This study will focus on the four of Hemingway works: The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and The Old Man and the Sea. These fictions will be examined with two purposes in mind: first, to view the alienation and its consequences of the characters and second, to observe the mental status of Hemingway.


Author(s):  
Zuzanna Ladyga

The chapter serves as a historical prelude to chapters on modernism and postmodernism, by providing a historical context for how the trope of laziness evolved in American literature prior to the 20th century. First, it looks at how the motif of laziness functioned in early Puritan literature, how this function was broadened in 18th-century secular and religious didactic literature, and how it eventually developed into an aesthetic device in the Early Republic, when the new trope of laziness combined high Romantic aesthetics of the pastoral with unrefined motifs of vagabondage and delinquency, and in this way addresses the culture’s desire for freedom from the norm of collective labour and from patterns of inclusion and exclusion within the consensual networks of social participation. Second, the chapter explores the difference between the familiar Romantic topos of idleness, which has no subversive potential with respect to ethical normativity and the topos of laziness, which does. Walt Whitman’s trope of loafing is reread here via the Cynical tradition of performative indomitability as parrhēsia, or speaking truth to power. Herman Melville’s experiments with haptic poetics of laziness in Typee are interpreted as a critique of Romantic moralism and the emerging ethico-aesthetic norm of productivity.


2003 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 214-251
Author(s):  
Cosima Bruno

The key words provided in the title – “ethnography,” “translation” and “intertextual travel” – as well as various combinations of these terms, explain the contents of this book, which sets out two main aims: to give an exposition of Orientalist cultural work in 20th-century American letters; and to consider this cultural work from a textual point of view.


Author(s):  
Tim Xu

As one of the notable figures in 20th Century American literature, F. Scott Fitzgerald has been studied widely by authors, critics, and historians alike. This paper addresses the role of Fitzgerald's time abroad in creating the inspiration for his work as well as Europe's part in catalyzing his eventual decline in the public eye. As a member of the so-called "Lost Generation" of American writers who took up residence in Paris during the 1920s, Fitzgerald was profoundly influenced by his peers, notably Ernest Hemingway. Another guiding factor in Fitzgerald's writing was the presence of Zelda, Fitzgerald's wife, whose mental illness placed both an emotional and financial strain on Fitzgerald. This paper examines the ups and downs of Fitzgerald's life while incorporating the analysis of several of his Europe-inspired works, including his last completed novel Tender is the Night and his famed short story "Babylon Revisited." Fitzgerald's life and work support the claim that Europe was fundamentally a double-edged sword - while Europe provided the thrilling lifestyle that fueled Fitzgerald's writing and widespread notoriety, it also brought about his ultimate disintegration.


Author(s):  
Sara Carini

The aim of this study is to describe the work of Italo Calvino as a lecturer of Hispano-American writers for Einaudi during the 1970s. Through specific case studies of editorial mediation taken by the archive documents of Einaudi we will outline the principles used by Calvino to assure the edition of Hispano-American works. That will help us to include Calvino’s activity into the field of Latin American literature reception and editorial mediation studies in Italy during the second half of the 20th century.


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