This A-Z, cross-referenced and illustrated title provides a unique overview of the period following the Civil War through the emergence of the United States as a world power at the end of World War I. The set features more than 250 survey entries. Subjects include: political topics (Reform, Womens Suffrage); ideas in context (Scientific Materialism, Darwinism); values (Assimilation, Success); society (Labor, Mass Marketing); genres (Science Fiction, War Writing); popular entertainment (Baseball, Boxing); publishing (Scribners Magazine); works of literature and nonfiction ( Billy Budd, 01 The Theory of the Leisure Class|); and much more. The analysis of a wide range of classics in American literature, viewed as cultural and historical documents, cultivates critical skills in reading texts from various perspectives, including aesthetic, biographical, social, historical, racial and gendered. Along with its companion title on the period covering 1820 to 1870, this set provides a comprehensive overview of a key century in American historical and literary studies.Call your Sales Rep for details.|PIM|31-MAY-18|01
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American History through Literature, 1870-1920 has been published with a companion set, American History through Literature, 1820-1870. The former features 247 articles by 182 academically affiliated contributors, while the latter presents 245 articles by 213 contributors. Seventeen scholars contributed to both sets. Most contributors come from the field of literature rather than history, which is entirely appropriate, since the title indicates this is history through literature. Both sets have 1,500- to 6,000-word entries on specific works (Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl); genres (Captivity narratives, Nautical literature, Science fiction); places (Baltimore, Chicago); groups (Catholics, Chinese, Publishers); themes (Death, Science and technology, Slavery); and events (Trail of Tears, World's Columbian Exposition), to name just a few. There are no biographical entries. Each set includes about 200 illustrations, photos, and maps, and concludes with a thematic outline, a list of entries in the companion set, a short list of primary material available through Primary Source Microfilm (like Scribner, a part of Thomson Gale), and an index. There is no reason given for the specific date spans covered, though it is pointed out several times in the first set that it was in 1820 that British critic Sydney Smith asked, "In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book?"
The sets give balanced viewpoints and devote a considerable number of entries to works by or about women (The Awakening, Poems of Emily Dickinson); African Americans (Blake; or, The Huts of America; The Two Offers); and Indians (American Indian stories, An Indian's Looking-Glass for the White Man) in addition to the requisite entries dealing with works by Hawthorne, Irving, Melville, Twain, and Whitman. All entries end with an up-to-date bibliography--most listing both primary and secondary works--plus cross-references to other entries within the set.
The only criticism is the decision to make these two separate sets--though to be fair, the publisher offers a discount when both are purchased together. A case in point is each set's entry on Mormons. The entry in the 1820-1870 set points out the anti-Mormon literature that was prevalent, including Arthur Conan Doyle's Study in Scarlet, written in 1888; the entry in the 1870-1920 set notes the Mountain Meadows Massacre of 1857, which is not even mentioned in the first set. This is indicative of the difficulty of dividing a set like this. More troubling is although there are cross-references within each set, there are no cross-references between each set other than the previously noted list of entries in the final volume of each. A reader could, for example, read the entry Satire, burlesque, and parody in the 1820-1870 set and be completely unaware that there is an entry of the same title in the 1870-1920 set. Indeed, there are 48 entries with the same titles between each set, plus another eight that are very similar. The reader must consult both to get a complete historical survey of the topic. Unless the publisher is planning on similar titles in the future, why not have just one set? Regardless, both American History through Literature, 1820-1870 and American History through Literature, 1870-1920 are highly recommended for academic and large public libraries. Ken Black
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