Sut Lovingood's Nat'ral Born Yarnspinner: Essays on George Washington HarrisJames Edward Caron, M. Thomas Inge University of Alabama Press, 1996 - 330 Seiten Recognizes and reconfirms the status of Harris as one of the most important antebellum comic writers Caron and Inge have compiled the first collection of critical commentary and new scholarship to be published on the east Tennessee, antebellum comic writer, George Washington Harris, who was famous for creating the character of Sut Lovingood. The collection both recognizes and reconfirms the status of Harris as one of the most important antebellum comic writers by bringing together new essays with essential biographical information and representative commentary from the past. Anyone wishing to understand Harris and his place within the tradition of American humor will want to read this book. Born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, Harris (1814-1869) spent most of his life in Knoxville, Tennessee. He served as captain on a Tennessee River steamboat, tried his hand at large-scale farming, and operated a metal working and jewelry shop. While on the farm he began to experiment with a variety of literary forms, and by 1854 he introduced Sut Lovingood, a youthful and "nat'ral born durn'd fool" from Tennessee. Throughout the 1850s Harris created a variety of adventures for Sut, which were extremely popular and often reprinted. Many of these Sut stories were included in his only book collection, Sut Lovingood. Yarns Spun by a Nat'ral Born Durn'd Fool, which was first published in 1867 and remained continuously in print until 1925. In his masterful use of dialect, striking control of metaphor and imagery, and the creation of explosive action, Harris was to have no match until Mark Twain and William Faulkner, both of whom read Harris with great appreciation. |
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... edition of Harris's Yarns in 1966 , edited by M. Thomas Inge and with the dialect intact , and an edition of Harris's uncollected material in 1967 , again edited by Inge and with extensive annotations . In 1965 , Milton Rickels ...
... edition . On the one hand he granted that the book was a modern treatment designed for the " average reader ” ; on the other hand he persisted in discussing the book as though it were a scholarly edition published for the " serious ...
... edition I sought to " clean up " the text by my treatment of Harris ' dialect . On this matter Carvel Collins has ... edition is misleading . Indeed , the full facts were available to Mr. Wilson in the introduction to the 1954 edition ...
Inhalt
JAMES E CARON | 1 |
DONALD | 33 |
ANONYMOUS | 69 |
Urheberrecht | |
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