Plotting the golden west : American literature and the rhetoric of the California trail
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Plotting the golden west : American literature and the rhetoric of the California trail
Cambridge University Press, 2010
- : pbk
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Note
"First published 1981. This digitally printed version 2010"--T. p. verso
"Paperback Re-issue"--Back cover
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book focuses on the experience of the Californian Gold Rush of 1849-1850, not in terms of what happened (a subject much covered by historians) but in terms of how people of various levels of sophistication wrote about it. Drawing on a variety of sources - diaries, journals, letters, and contemporary journalism - Dr Fender explores how both amateur and professional writers attempted to come to terms with the physical wilderness of the transcontinental landscape and the social wilderness of early California. Dr Fender has produced an intriguing and highly readable book, which should prove fascinating not only to a wide range of students in the field of American studies but also to non-specialists who are interested in nineteenth-century American literary and cultural history.
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1. The West and the man of letters: confidence and anxiety
- 2. Fremont and the humble bee
- 3. The forty-niners: the stylistic pathology of the Overland Trail
- 4. The unofficial Gold Rush
- 5. The journalists' California
- 6. Mark Twain's West: the stillbirth of satire
- 7. The perennial critique and the poem of fact
- Notes to the text
- List of primary sources treated at length
- An essay on further reading
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"