American fiction -- 19th century -- History and criticism
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American fiction -- 19th century -- History and criticism
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American fiction
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Incoming Resources
- Barriers between us, interracial sex in nineteenth-century American literature, Cassandra Jackson
- The origins of the American detective story, LeRoy Lad Panek
- The economic novel in America
- Pretend we're dead, capitalist monsters in American pop culture, Annalee Newitz
- Women, ethnics, and exotics, images of power in mid-nineteenth-century American fiction, by Kristin Herzog
- Harriet Beecher Stowe and American literature, Ellen Moers
- The beginnings of naturalism in American fiction, a study of the works of Hamlin Garland, Stephen Crane, and Frank Norris, with special reference to some European influences, 1891-1903, by Lars Åhnebrink
- Unwelcome voices, subversive fiction in the Antebellum South, Paul Christian Jones
- American novelists in Italy;, the discoverers: Allston to James
- The adventurous muse, the poetics of American fiction, 1789-1900, William C. Spengemann
- States of sympathy, seduction and democracy in the American novel, Elizabeth Barnes
- A cultural history of the American novel, Henry James to William Faulkner, David Minter
- Private woman, public stage, literary domesticity in nineteenth-century America, Mary Kelley
- Unruly tongue, identity and voice in American women's writing, 1850-1930, Martha J. Cutter
- Power and order, Henry Adams and the naturalist tradition in American fiction, Harold Kaplan
- Covenant and republic, historical romance and the politics of Puritanism, Philip Gould
- The economic novel in America
- The genius of democracy, fictions of gender and citizenship in the United States, 1860-1945, Victoria Olwell
- Form and fable in American fiction
- A question of character, scientific racism and the genres of American fiction, 1892-1912, Cathy Boeckmann
- American theories of the novel, 1793-1903, Sergio Perosa
- Narration and discourse in American realistic fiction, Janet Holmgren McKay
- Domestic novelists in the Old South, defenders of southern culture, Elizabeth Moss
- Revolution and the word, the rise of the novel in America, Cathy N. Davidson
- Hard facts, setting and form in the American novel, Philip Fisher
- Reconstructing womanhood, the emergence of the Afro-American woman novelist, Hazel V. Carby
- The dream of the great American novel, Lawrence Buell
- American and English fiction in the nineteenth century;, an antigenre critique and comparison
- All the happy endings, a study of the domestic novel in America, the women who wrote it, the women who read it, in the nineteenth century, by Helen Waite Papashvily
- Nat Turner before the bar of judgment, fictional treatments of the Southampton slave insurrection, Mary Kemp Davis
- Unruly tongue, identity and voice in American women's writing, 1850-1930, Martha J. Cutter
- Realism and naturalism in nineteenth-century American literature, Donald Pizer
- Monumental anxieties, homoerotic desire and feminine influence in 19th century U.S. literature, Scott S. Derrick
- Black and white strangers, race and American literary realism, Kenneth W. Warren
- Villains galore;, the heyday of the popular story weekly
- Monumental anxieties, homoerotic desire and feminine influence in 19th century U.S. literature, Scott S. Derrick
- Naturalism in American fiction, the classic phase, John J. Conder
- The dime novel western, Daryl Jones
- The problematic fictions of Poe, James, and Hawthorne, Judith L. Sutherland
- Before Sherlock Holmes, How Magazines and Newspapers Invented the Detective Story
- Rebels and ancestors;, the American novel, 1890-1915: Frank Norris, Stephen Crane, Jack London, Ellen Glasgow [and] Theodore Dreiser
- Homicide in American fiction, 1798-1860;, a study in social values
- Recalling the wild, naturalism and the closing of the American West, Mary Lawlor
- Mechanic accents, dime novels and working-class culture in America, Michael Denning
- American literary realism and the failed promise of contract, Brook Thomas
- "Touched with fire?", two Philadelphia novelists remember the Civil War, J. Matthew Gallman
- Democracy and the novel, popular resistance to classic American writers, Henry Nash Smith
- A world made safe, values in American best sellers, 1895-1920, Erik Löfroth
- Disciplining girls, understanding the origins of the classic orphan girl story, Joe Sutliff Sanders
- Amalgamation!, race, sex, and rhetoric in the nineteenth-century American novel, James Kinney
Outgoing Resources
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