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Radical Representations – Politics and Form in U.S. Proletarian Fiction, 1929–1941: Post-Contemporary Interventions

Autor Barbara Foley
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 sep 1993
In this revisionary study, Barbara Foley challenges prevalent myths about left-wing culture in the Depression-era U.S. Focusing on a broad range of proletarian novels and little-known archival material, the author recaptures an important literature and rewrites a segment of American cultural history long obscured and distorted by the anti-Communist bias of contemporaries and critics.
Josephine Herbst, William Attaway, Jack Conroy, Thomas Bell and Tillie Olsen, are among the radical writers whose work Foley reexamines. Her fresh approach to the U.S. radicals' debates over experimentalism, the relation of art to propaganda, and the nature of proletarian literature recasts the relation of writers to the organized left. Her grasp of the left's positions on the "Negro question" and the "woman question" enables a nuanced analysis of the relation of class to race and gender in the proletarian novel. Moreover, examining the articulation of political doctrine in different novelistic modes, Foley develops a model for discussing the interplay between politics and literary conventions and genres.
"Radical Representations" recovers a literature of theoretical and artistic value meriting renewed attention form those interested in American literature, American studies, the U. S. left, and cultural studies generally.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822313946
ISBN-10: 0822313944
Pagini: 484
Dimensiuni: 147 x 215 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.69 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Seria Post-Contemporary Interventions

Locul publicării:United States

Notă biografică


Textul de pe ultima copertă

"[Foley] substantially refutes the received wisdom that writers within the Communist Party and its periphery produced a degraded, politically compromised body of work because they followed a formula dictated from the party leadership. I cannot imagine anyone interested in politics and literature not taking this book as required reading. It will also be of great interest to American Studies, Cultural Studies and historians and sociologists of culture."--Stanley Aronowitz, CUNY Graduate Center

Cuprins

Preface vii
Part One
1. The Legacy of Anti-Communism 3
2. Influences on American Proletarian Literature 44
3. Defining Proletarian Litearture 86
4. Art or Propaganda? 129
5. Race, Class, and the "Negro Question" 170
6. Women and the Left in the 1930s 213
Part Two
7. Realism and Didacticism in Proletarian Fiction 249
8. The Proletarian Fictional Autobiography 284
9. The Proletarian Bildungsroman 321
10. The Proletarian Social Novel 362
11. The Collective Novel 398
Afterword 443
Index 447