America?s most influential literary figure worldwide is familiar to most readers of short fiction through only about a dozen stories. This is because many of Poe?s tales depend on knowledge a reader in 1835 or 1845 might have had that a typical reader in 2000 would not. In this extensively annotated and meticulously edited selection of Poe?s short fiction, Stuart Levine and Susan F. Levine connect Poe to major literary forces of his era and to the rapidly changing U.S. of the 1830s and 1840s, discussing Shelley, Carlyle, Byron, Emerson, and Hawthorne, as well as the railroad, photography, and the telegraph. In the process, they reveal a Poe immersed in the America of his day its politics, science, technology, best-selling books, biases, arts, journalism, fads, scandals, and even sexual mores and render accessible all thirty-two stories included here.
Thirty-two stories
Sobre
Talvez você seja redirecionado para outro site