What America Read: Taste, Class, and the Novel, 1920-1960

What America Read: Taste, Class, and the Novel, 1920-1960

by Gordon Hutner
What America Read: Taste, Class, and the Novel, 1920-1960

What America Read: Taste, Class, and the Novel, 1920-1960

by Gordon Hutner

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Overview

Despite the vigorous study of modern American fiction, today's readers are only familiar with a partial shelf of a vast library. Gordon Hutner describes the distorted, canonized history of the twentieth-century American novel as a record of modern classics insufficiently appreciated in their day but recuperated by scholars in order to shape the grand tradition of Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and Faulkner. In presenting literary history this way, Hutner argues, scholars have forgotten a rich treasury of realist novels that recount the story of the American middle-class's confrontation with modernity. Reading these novels now offers an extraordinary opportunity to witness debates about what kind of nation America would become and what place its newly dominant middle class would have—and, Hutner suggests, should also lead us to wonder how our own contemporary novels will be remembered.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807872123
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 09/01/2011
Edition description: 1
Pages: 464
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Gordon Hutner is professor of English at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and founding editor of the journal American Literary History.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

In restoring to view the middle-class novels that chronicled Americans' multifaceted responses to modernity, Hutner is a master chronicler himself. His reclamation project—astutely directed at both criticism and fiction—enables us to recover a more accurate and a more democratic literary history than we have previously possessed.—Joan Shelley Rubin, University of Rochester, author of Songs of Ourselves: American Readers and the Uses of Verse

For more than twenty years, Gordon Hutner has been a leader in transforming the field of American literature studies. In What America Read, he makes a distinctive and original undertaking: to diagnose the soul of the American literate middle class over a crucial forty-year period by examining quality realist fiction and the critical conversations in which this fiction took part.—Jonathan Arac, University of Pittsburgh

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