美國的文學**M.堪利夫**
西洋文學**今日世界出版社**民國52年 Sencon Print. 1963美國的文學The Literature of the United States by Marcus Cunliffe,
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Allen Tate Ameri American literature American poet American writers authors became Boston Brahmins called Cambridge Harvard U.P. century CHAPTER characters Chicago Civil colonial contemporary Cooper Crane critics deal death drama Dreiser E. E. Cummings early Edith Wharton Eliot Emerson Emily Dickinson England English essays Europe European Ezra Pound father Faulkner fiction Fitzgerald Gertrude Stein Hawthorne Hemingway Henry Adams Henry James Herman Melville hero Howells human humour Indian Irving John later letters literary lived London Longfellow Lowell Mark Twain Melville modern native Natty nature Negro never novel novelist O'Neill Passos perhaps play Poe's poems poetry Pound prose published Puritan reader realism Sandburg scene seems sense Sherwood Anderson short stories Sinclair Lewis social society South Southern speak style T. S. Eliot theatre theme things Thoreau thought tion United verse Wallace Stevens Whitman wilderness William words writing wrote York young
Bibliographic information
這本書的譯名雖然與現在習用的差異多
而且有刪節 不過很可以參考
而且有刪節 不過很可以參考
Marcus Falkner Cunliffe (5 July 1922-2 September 1990) was born in Lancashire, England and spent his life studying the history of the United States. Professor Cunliffe was a distinguished historian and expert on George Washington. His seminal book "George Washington: Man and Monument," was first published in 1958. Professor Cunliffe served on the faculty of The George Washington University as University Professor from 1980 to his death in 1990.
搞錯:
Marcus Cunliffe (1922-1990) was a British scholar who specialized in American Studies, especially military and cultural history. Cunliffe stressed the powerful influence of Americans' cultural beliefs about their own natural military capacity, reinforced by a latent dislike of military professionals, on the nature and performance of the militia/volunteers. Cunliffe pointed the way to the "new military history" in his Soldiers and Civilians: The Martial Spirit in America, 1775–1865 (1969). Cunliffe explored American "exceptionalism" and the national desire it promotes to look inward rather than outward. Cunliffe forcefully argues that the United States was less exceptional than many American writers believe. He always emphasizes the interconnections between Western cultures. Living in Washington in the 1980s, he perhaps reacted against the chauvinism of the Ronald Reagan years; but his writing invariably stressed the European (and especially British) roots of American military ideas.
Marcus Cunliffe (1922-1990) was a British scholar who specialized in American Studies, especially military and cultural history. Cunliffe stressed the powerful influence of Americans' cultural beliefs about their own natural military capacity, reinforced by a latent dislike of military professionals, on the nature and performance of the militia/volunteers. Cunliffe pointed the way to the "new military history" in his Soldiers and Civilians: The Martial Spirit in America, 1775–1865 (1969). Cunliffe explored American "exceptionalism" and the national desire it promotes to look inward rather than outward. Cunliffe forcefully argues that the United States was less exceptional than many American writers believe. He always emphasizes the interconnections between Western cultures. Living in Washington in the 1980s, he perhaps reacted against the chauvinism of the Ronald Reagan years; but his writing invariably stressed the European (and especially British) roots of American military ideas.
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