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Gandal contends that The Great Gatsby, The Sun Also Rises and The Sound and the Fury were all written by men who were greatly influenced by their shared frustration of not serving in the American military's colossal war effort. At the same time, these same authors also observed, among other startling developments, the Army's first egalitarian treatment of ethnic or hyphenated-Americans in regard to officer selection. The Great War mobilization shaped large-scale shifts in American life, including the meritocratic assignment of recruits to military rank based on intelligence testing, rather than Anglo-social and family background; an unprecedented military propaganda campaign aimed at fighting venereal disease and the redefinition of masculinity as chaste, chivalrous and athletic; the incarceration of tens of thousands of prostitutes as well as "promiscuous" women in an effort to police American female sexual behavior; and a dramatic but failed effort to ban sexual contact between American troops and French prostitutes. Mobilization Fiction involves a fundamental rethinking of these three novels, as well as other modernist postwar prose of the 1920s and 30s, in view of this essential history of the Great War mobilization.
American fiction --- World War, 1914-1918 --- War and society --- Modernism (Literature) --- History and criticism --- Literature and the war --- History --- Fitzgerald, F. Scott --- Hemingway, Ernest, --- Faulkner, William, --- United States --- Armed Forces --- Mobilization --- History and criticism. --- Literature and the war. --- History. --- Roman américain --- Guerre mondiale (1914-1918) --- Forces armées américaines. --- Histoire et critique. --- Littérature et guerre. --- Fitzgerald, Francis Scott --- Hemingway, Ernest --- Faulkner, William --- American fiction - 20th century - History and criticism --- World War, 1914-1918 - United States - Literature and the war --- War and society - United States - History - 20th century --- Modernism (Literature) - United States --- Fitzgerald, F. Scott - (Francis Scott), - 1896-1940. - Great Gatsby --- Hemingway, Ernest, - 1899-1961 - Sun also rises --- Faulkner, William, - 1897-1962. - Sound and the fury --- United States - Armed Forces - Mobilization - History --- Forces armées américaines --- Roman américain --- Forces armées américaines --- Littérature et guerre.
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Gandal reveals how the slum, in last decade of 19th century America became the source of spectacle in the press, photography and literature. He argues that this interest amounted to a revolution in ethics.
American prose literature --- Didactic literature, American --- Slums --- City and town life in literature. --- Social ethics in literature. --- Slums in literature. --- Spectacular, The. --- Spectacle --- Aesthetics --- Slum clearance --- Housing --- History and criticism. --- Historiography. --- Crane, Stephen, --- Riis, Jacob A. --- Riis, Jacob August, --- Influence. --- Crane, Stephen --- Riis, Jacob August --- 19th century --- History and criticism --- Didactic literature [American ] --- New York (State) --- New York (N.Y.) --- Historiography --- City and town life in literature --- Slums in literature --- Spectacular [The ] --- Crane, Stephen, - 1871-1900. - Maggie, a girl of the streets. --- Riis, Jacob A. - (Jacob August), - 1849-1914. - How the other half lives. --- Didactic literature, American - History and criticism. --- Slums - New York (State) - New York - Historiography.
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War and society --- World War, 1914-1918 --- American prose literature --- Society and war --- War --- Sociology --- Civilians in war --- Sociology, Military --- History --- Literature and the war. --- History and criticism. --- Social aspects
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Juxtapositioning recent films and the classic writings and unusual lives of Zora Neale Hurston, Stephen Crane, Henry Miller, and Michel Foucault, this book provides the reader with a fresh understanding of the representation of poverty and class in American literature and film. The book argues for Hurston's centrality, not merely to the 'African'-American canon, but to the 'American' tradition.
American literature --- American literature --- Christianity and politics. --- Church and state. --- Difference (Psychology) in literature. --- Motion pictures and literature --- Nationalism --- Patriotism. --- Poor in literature. --- Social classes in literature. --- History and criticism --- History and criticism --- Religious aspects --- Christianity. --- Hurston, Zora Neale --- Crane, Stephen, --- Miller, Henry, --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Criticism and interpretation.
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