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<title>Literature</title>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2013 Fordham University All rights reserved.</copyright>
<link>http://fordham.bepress.com/lit</link>
<description>Recent documents in Literature</description>
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<lastBuildDate>Mon, 25 Mar 2013 08:15:14 PDT</lastBuildDate>
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<title>Small Town</title>
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<pubDate>Tue, 03 Aug 2010 13:37:13 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>Granville Hicks was one of America's most influential literary and social critics.  Along with Malcolm Cowley, F. O. Matthiessen, Max Eastman, Alfred Kazin, and others, he shaped the cultural landscape of 20th-century America.</p>
<p>In 1946 Hicks published Small Town, a portrait of life in the rural crossroads of Grafton, N.Y., where he had moved after being fired from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute for his left-wing political views.  In this book, he combines a kind of hand-crafted ethnographic research with personal reflections on the qualities of small town life that were being threatened by spreading cities and suburbs. He eloquently tried to define the essential qualities of small town community life and to link them to the best features of American culture. The book sparked numerous articles and debates in a baby-boom America nervously on the move.</p>
<p>Long out of print, this classic of cultural criticism speaks powerfully to a new generation seeking to reconnect with a sense of place in American life, both rural and urban. An unaffected, deeply felt portrait of one such place by one of the best American critics, it should find a new home as a vivid reminder of what we have lost-and what we might still be able to protect.</p>

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<author>Granville Hicks et al.</author>


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<title>Fears and Fascinations: Representing Catholicism in the American South</title>
<link>http://fordham.bepress.com/lit/2</link>
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<pubDate>Tue, 03 Aug 2010 13:36:28 PDT</pubDate>
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	<p>This innovative book charts what has been a largely unexplored literary landscape, looking at the work of such diverse writers as the gens de couleur libre poets of antebellum New Orleans, Kate Chopin, Mark Twain, Carson McCullers, Margaret Mitchell, Allen Tate, Caroline Gordon, Flannery O'Connor, Walker Percy, and John Kennedy Toole. Haddox shows that Catholicism and its Church have always been a presence, albeit in different ways, in the southern cultural tradition.</p>
<p>For some, Catholicism has been associated with miscegenation and with the political aspirations of African-Americans; for others, it has served as the model for the feudal and patriarchal society that some southern whites sought to establish; for still others, it has presented a gorgeous aesthetic spectacle associated with decadence and homoeroticism; and for still others, it has marked a quotidian, do-it-yourself "lifestyle" attractive for its lack of concern with southern anxieties about honor.</p>
<p>By focusing on the shifting and contradictory ways Catholicism has signified within southern literature and culture, Fears and Fascinations contributes to a more nuanced understanding of American and southern literary and cultural history.</p>
<p>Thomas F. Haddox is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. He has published articles in American Literature, Mosaic, Modern Language Quarterly, Southern Quarterly, Mississippi Quarterly, and Walt Whitman Quarterly Review.</p>

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<author>Thomas F. Haddox</author>


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