Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Visionaries Of The American West : Mari Sandoz And Her Four Plains Protagonists, Lisa R. Lindell
Visionaries Of The American West : Mari Sandoz And Her Four Plains Protagonists, Lisa R. Lindell
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
The authorial reputation of Mari Sandoz has long rested in the shadow of other writers of her era. First of all, Sandoz wrote from and about a relatively remote region of the United States. In addition, she firmly refused to produce popular works at the expense of sacrificing the truth she perceived and wished to express. Consequently, Sandoz has often been classified as a regional writer and her works have been overlooked by many readers and critics. Her status as a woman, her unconventional writing style, point of view, and subject matter, and the blending of historical and fictional elements …
Shattering The Myth : A Feminist Study Of Sister-Sister Relationships In Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House Books, Ellen T. Simpson
Shattering The Myth : A Feminist Study Of Sister-Sister Relationships In Laura Ingalls Wilder's Little House Books, Ellen T. Simpson
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
From the Introduction:
From horses and buggies through steam railway _engines to the prominence of the automobile, Laura Ingalls Wilder lived through a historically critical American experience--pioneering. At age sixty-five she published her first novel, Little House in the Big Woods, the first book in an as yet unforeseen nine book series about her experiences as a young girl raised on the Midwestern plains. Little House in the Big Woods is actually a compilation of her father's tales. Wilder feared that these stories and their value would be lost unless she preserved them in writing. ldealistica!ly, she wanted to tell …