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Taking its cue from Perry Miller's 1956 classic of American
literary criticism, The Raven and the Whale: The War of Words and
Wits in the Era of Poe and Melville, Caroline Chamberlin Hellman's
new book examines ways in which contemporary multi-ethnic American
writers of the United States have responded to nineteenth- and
early twentieth-century texts historically central to the American
literary canon.Each chapter of Children of the Raven and the Whale
looks down the roads American literature ultimately traveled,
examining pairs and constellations of texts in conversation. In
their rewritings and layerings of new stories over older ones,
contemporary writers forge ahead in their interrogations of a
spectrum of American experience, whether they or their characters
are native to the United States, first- or second-generation
immigrants, or transnational. Revealing the traces of texts by
writers such as Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne,
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Richard Wright, and James
Baldwin lying beneath contemporary American literature by Chang-rae
Lee, Jonathan Lethem, Jhumpa Lahiri, Junot Diaz, Joseph O'Neill,
Colum McCann, and Ta-Nehisi Coates, Caroline Chamberlin Hellman
posits the existence of a twenty-first-century American
Renaissance.
Taking its cue from Perry Miller's 1956 classic of American
literary criticism, The Raven and the Whale: The War of Words and
Wits in the Era of Poe and Melville, Caroline Chamberlin Hellman's
new book examines ways in which contemporary multi-ethnic American
writers of the United States have responded to nineteenth- and
early twentieth-century texts historically central to the American
literary canon.Each chapter of Children of the Raven and the Whale
looks down the roads American literature ultimately traveled,
examining pairs and constellations of texts in conversation. In
their rewritings and layerings of new stories over older ones,
contemporary writers forge ahead in their interrogations of a
spectrum of American experience, whether they or their characters
are native to the United States, first- or second-generation
immigrants, or transnational. Revealing the traces of texts by
writers such as Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne,
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Richard Wright, and James
Baldwin lying beneath contemporary American literature by Chang-rae
Lee, Jonathan Lethem, Jhumpa Lahiri, Junot Diaz, Joseph O'Neill,
Colum McCann, and Ta-Nehisi Coates, Caroline Chamberlin Hellman
posits the existence of a twenty-first-century American
Renaissance.
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