The betrayal of brotherhood in the work of John Steinbeck
著者
書誌事項
The betrayal of brotherhood in the work of John Steinbeck
(Studies in American literature, v. 33)
Edwin Mellen Press, 2000
大学図書館所蔵 全7件
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This work contains a collection of essays that explore Steinbeck's preoccupation with the story of Cain and Abel. It addresses the issue of how, for Steinbeck, the story of sibling rivalry reflects a deeper, typically American confusion over whether to choose brotherhood over self-satisfaction.
目次
- Part 1: shaping Cain and Abel, Meyer
- from other to brother, McCarthy
- Steinbeck as fabulist, Jones
- Adam's wound, Steinbeck IV. Part 2: "am I my brother's keeper?" fathers, brothers and wives in Steinbeck's "To a God Unknown", Werlock
- "The Pastures of Heaven" - agrarianism and the emergent middle class, Mann
- the evil other and the migrant movement - Cain sign in "In Dubious Battle", Cassuto
- overcome by Cain - human nature's inner battle in Steinbeck's "Strike" novel, Busch
- "Of Mice and Men" - a story of innocence retained, McEntyre
- "Of Mice and Men" - John Steinbeck's parable of the curse of Cain, Goldhurst
- a fugitive upon the earth - Tom Joad and the myth of Cain, Shaw
- between inaction and immoral action - Tom Joad's self-definition, Barry
- dual duality - Kino as Cain "and" Abel in "The Pearl", Syed
- raising Cain - Steinbeck's "The Red Pony" and the reversal of biblical myth, Etheridge
- the "Bright" failure - what shall we make of chaos?, Railsback
- fathers and sons in "East of Eden", Ouderkirk
- friendly fire - Steinbeck's "East of Eden", Gladstein
- endless possibilities - the significance of "Nomos" in Steinbeck's "East of Eden", Meyer
- the dissolution of the curse of Cain in "East of Eden", Bragg
- John Steinbeck's "Viva Zapata!" and the curse of Cain, Yarmus
- relation, vision and tracking the Welsh rats in "East of Eden" and "The Winter of Our Discontent", Burningham
- citizen Cain - Hawley's double identity in "The Winter of Our Discontent", Meyer
- judge, observer, prophet - the American Cain and Steinbeck's shifting perspective, Heavlin
- "we are Cain's children" - towards a newer testament, Ditsky.
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