Versions of the past: The Historical Imagination in American Fiction

1977 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 158
Author(s):  
Andrew Hook ◽  
Harry B. Henderson III
1975 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 156
Author(s):  
Sharon Bannister ◽  
Harry B. Henderson III ◽  
Warren A. Beck ◽  
Myles L. Clowers

1976 ◽  
Vol 81 (2) ◽  
pp. 439
Author(s):  
Henry Nash Smith ◽  
Harry B. Henderson III

1975 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 292
Author(s):  
David Levin ◽  
Harry B. Henderson III

2017 ◽  
Vol 41 (6) ◽  
pp. 447-461
Author(s):  
Yago Colás

ESPN’s 22 basketball-themed documentaries are popular and influential sources for students and fans interested in basketball history. I offer close readings of two films, There’s No Place Like Home and The Fab Five, to shed light on how they (and to some degree the corpus as a whole) portray basketball history, reflect on the historiographical task of portraying the past, and affectively engage viewers to adopt certain stances with respect to the past and its portrayal. There’s No Place Like Home invites viewers to share in a fantasy of basketball as a decontextualized static idea whose history can be possessed. By contrast, The Fab Five challenges viewers to view basketball history as contested terrain where conflicting power vectors of language, culture, and society intersect.


PMLA ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 629-638 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret Church

In two passages of his recent book on Thomas Wolfe (1947), Herbert J. Muller has briefly, but incisively, dealt with the time concepts of Wolfe and Proust. He points out that while both writers depended upon sensory impressions to recall the past, Wolfe lacked the keen subjective analysis of Proust and stayed closer to the actual experience that produced his memories. Wolfe's interest was in fixity and change as they are in real life, while Proust “aspired to the realm of Essence or Being, where change is mere appearance” (p. 75). It is important, I believe, that these distinctions be made, for Wolfe, unlike Proust, was no philosopher and would without question have been confused by an array of Bergsonian metaphysics. While outwardly the time concepts of Wolfe and of Proust seem somewhat alike, a closer examination reveals that these concepts are in many respects different. But no distinctions were made, for instance, by Mary M. Colum in her article on “Literature of Today and Tomorrow” (Scribner's, Dec. 1936, p. 102), which stated that Wolfe's work might well be described as “Remembrance of Things Past”—that “like Proust he tells us of his struggles with Time elements.” And Joseph Warren Beach, in American Fiction 1920–1940 (1941), while acknowledging that Wolfe could not have accepted fully the implications of Proust's theories, found that Wolfe and Proust had had a common psychological experience. “It is found in the recall by means of present sensations or impressions of closely similar impressions received in extreme youth” (p. 192).


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