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James Branch Cabell and Richmond-In-Virginia

Edgar MacDonald (Autor)

University Press of Mississippi (Editora)

R$ 308,13
SKU: 9781604738568

James Branch Cabell and Richmond-in-Virginia

by Edgar MacDonald

In his prime Vanity Fair nominated James Branch Cabell for "Immortality" on its pages reserved for acclaiming the most select of notable achievers. Favored by the intelligentsia, Cabell was the author of a series of fabulous, well-told fictions that in the 1920s made him a household literary name. Among his many acclaimed books published by 1930 are Jurgen, The Lineage of Lichfield, The Silver Stallion, Something About Eve, The White Robe, and The Works of James Branch Cabell in eighteen volumes. By the time of his death in 1958 the list of his works had become prodigiously long, but he had been in eclipse for almost three decades. This definitive biography serves to restore to Cabell the recognition he deserves. Here he is portrayed as a jesting critic of southern chivalry, an ambivalent artist whose feelings for Richmond required a lifetime to reconcile. He was quintessentially a Virginian. His native Richmond shaped him, and its social milieu indelibly marked him. He matured as a writer in the climate of the postbellum South and excelled in subjecting the rigid graces of "Richmond-in-Virginia" to satire and burlesque. Like his fellow Virginian Ellen Glasgow, he had mixed emotions about home. Not to love Virginia was an act of betrayal, yet to condone its stultifying, Old South idealism was to betray oneself. With the deterioration of Richmond's Edwardian values in the 1920s Cabell emerged as a major literary figure, hailed as an iconoclast and debunker of myths, but by the 1930s his mannered, self-conscious style was out of fashion. Cabell was dogged by scandal. There was the question of homosexuality. It was charged that he murdered the man reputed to be his mother's lover. After a notorious New York trial his most notable book Jurgen was suppressed for violating antiobscenity laws. In this inclusive examination of Cabell's life and milieu a fascinating literary figure is rescued from the literary

Sobre o Livro

Biografia que examina a relação entre James Branch Cabell e a cidade de Richmond, com atenção ao contexto social e cultural do Sul pós-Guerra Civil. O livro aborda obras-chave como Jurgen e The Lineage of Lichfield no quadro da trajetória literária do autor.

Análise das tensões entre a idealização da tradição sulista e a postura crítica de Cabell, incluindo episódios controvertidos que marcaram sua carreira. Inclui discussão sobre recepção crítica e censura em diferentes períodos do século XX.

Texto voltado para leitores de literatura americana e história cultural, útil para cursos sobre literatura sulista e estudos de recepção. Apresenta contextualização histórica de Richmond e exame das principais obras e temas cabellianos.

Características

Categoria Biografia literária
Subcategoria Crítica literária
Autores Edgar MacDonald
Sobre o Autor Edgar MacDonald é autor de estudos sobre literatura americana e cultura regional, com atuação em pesquisa acadêmica.
Idioma Inglês
Quantidade de Páginas 414
Acabamento Brochura
Editora University Press of Mississippi
ISBN 9781604738568
Tamanho 15.2x22.9
Translation missing: pt-BR.general.search.loading