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Articles 1 - 9 of 9

Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Alice Munro: An Appreciation, Michael Boyd May 2014

Alice Munro: An Appreciation, Michael Boyd

Bridgewater Review

No abstract provided.


The Irish Odyssey Of James Mccarroll, Michael Peterman Jun 2011

The Irish Odyssey Of James Mccarroll, Michael Peterman

Bridgewater Review

No abstract provided.


Masterpiece Or Racist Trash? Bridgewater Students Enter The Debate Over Huckleberry Finn, Barbara Apstein Jun 2000

Masterpiece Or Racist Trash? Bridgewater Students Enter The Debate Over Huckleberry Finn, Barbara Apstein

Bridgewater Review

No abstract provided.


The Novelist As Historian, Michael Boyd Dec 1998

The Novelist As Historian, Michael Boyd

Bridgewater Review

No abstract provided.


The American Struggle For Identity In 18th Century Newspaper Verse, Ann Brunjes Jun 1998

The American Struggle For Identity In 18th Century Newspaper Verse, Ann Brunjes

Bridgewater Review

No abstract provided.


Contemporary English Perspectives On The American Civil War: Rare Documents, Sylvia Larson Jun 1995

Contemporary English Perspectives On The American Civil War: Rare Documents, Sylvia Larson

Bridgewater Review

No abstract provided.


Mark Twain's Roughing It: A Humorist's Darker Side, Joseph Yokelson Jan 1987

Mark Twain's Roughing It: A Humorist's Darker Side, Joseph Yokelson

Bridgewater Review

Roughing It was based rather roughly on a period of Twain’s life that began in 1861, when Twain went west with his brother Orion. Orion had been appointed Secretary of the Nevada territory with the help of friend who had a friend in Lincoln’s new cabinet. Twain had just faded quietly out of the Confederate army after suffering from boils and a sprained ankle and never firing a shot. For a while out west, Twain prospected for silver around Virginia City; then for about two years he was a reporter for the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise. In 1864 he drifted …


The Timely Humor Of Stephen Leacock, Harold Ridlon Jul 1984

The Timely Humor Of Stephen Leacock, Harold Ridlon

Bridgewater Review

Stephen Leacock, one of the finest humorists of this century deserves reassessment. Born in 1869 in Swansmore, Hampshire, England, and resettled with his family on a farm near Lake Simcoe, Ontario, at age six, he survived the rigors of frontier life in a family of twelve children, all reared by a mother of breeding, hardihood, and humaneness, and deserted by a profligate, Micawber-like but insensitive father. Through his mother's encouragement and meager family endowment, he attended Upper Canada College, a private secondary school in Toronto. Leacock's best known and most widely used text, Elements of Political Science (1906), earned him …


Rediscovering James T. Farrell, Charles Fanning Oct 1983

Rediscovering James T. Farrell, Charles Fanning

Bridgewater Review

No major American writer has been worse served by criticism than James T. Farrell. After the publication in 1935 of his first fictional series, the Studs Lonigan trilogy, Farrell labored for four decades under an unjust and unfounded critical accusation. During these years, many influential critics dealt with his fiction as it appeared by mechanical citation of a party line which ran as follows: "James T. Farrell is that sad case, a one-book writer. Studs Lonigan is credible fiction, albeit in the limiting and dated naturalistic mode pioneered by Theodore Dreiser. But his subsequent novels have been obsessive reworkings of …