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- catalog abstract "As a source of literary inspiration, New Orleans has few peers among American cities. For more than a century writers of diverse stripe have been drawn by the city's singular appeal, a result of the intermingling of a host of cultural influences--French, Spanish, African, West Indian--as well as the lingering vestiges of the frontier spirit and the ordeals of the Civil War. Literary New Orleans is an altogether engaging collection of ruminations on some of the most. Important writers who have fallen under the spell of this exotic place. The nineteenth-century author George Washington Cable, though a native New Orleanian, was in many respects an outsider. As Alice Hall Petry notes, Cable, a man of Puritan ancestry, frequently cast a critical eye on what he perceived to be the moral failings of New Orleans society, particularly in regard to issues of race. Grace King, on the other hand, was an unfailing apologist for her city and. Region. Robert Bush writes about King's life and career, noting that she combined a political conservatism with a forward-looking attitude toward the role of women in the world. Though neither was a native of New Orleans, both Lafcadio Hearn and Kate Chopin were influenced, in different ways, by their experiences there. Hephzibah Roskelly describes the writing that emerged from the years that Hearn spent among the city's marginalized ethnic populations, and Anne Rowe. Notes that Chopin's memories of New Orleans found expression in much of her best work, including her still widely read novel The Awakening. W. Kenneth Holditch has interviewed everyone he could locate who was a member of the French Quarter's artistic colony in the 1920s in order to bring William Faulkner's stay in New Orleans to life and discuss its influence on his work. In another piece Holditch describes the creative and personal freedom Tennessee Williams found in. The Crescent City, which the playwright called his spiritual home. Walker Percy lived in New Orleans for only a brief period before removing himself to a more tranquil setting on the other side of Lake Pontchartrain, but, as Lewis Lawson shows, he was always fascinated by the city's complexities and contradictions. In the book's final essay Lewis P. Simpson reflects on the history of New Orleans as a literary center, with a special focus on depictions of the city in. Percy's The Moviegoer and John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces. For professional scholar and general reader alike, this volume will be a much-appreciated resource on the literary history of the South.".
- catalog contributor b3576293.
- catalog coverage "New Orleans (La.) In literature.".
- catalog coverage "New Orleans (La.) Intellectual life.".
- catalog created "c1992.".
- catalog date "1992".
- catalog date "c1992.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1992.".
- catalog description "As a source of literary inspiration, New Orleans has few peers among American cities. For more than a century writers of diverse stripe have been drawn by the city's singular appeal, a result of the intermingling of a host of cultural influences--French, Spanish, African, West Indian--as well as the lingering vestiges of the frontier spirit and the ordeals of the Civil War. Literary New Orleans is an altogether engaging collection of ruminations on some of the most.".
- catalog description "Important writers who have fallen under the spell of this exotic place. The nineteenth-century author George Washington Cable, though a native New Orleanian, was in many respects an outsider. As Alice Hall Petry notes, Cable, a man of Puritan ancestry, frequently cast a critical eye on what he perceived to be the moral failings of New Orleans society, particularly in regard to issues of race. Grace King, on the other hand, was an unfailing apologist for her city and.".
- catalog description "Native outsider: George Washington Cable / Alice Hall Petry -- The patrician voice: Grace King / Robert Bush -- Cultural translator: Lafcadio Hearn / Hephzibah Roskelly -- New Orleans as metaphor: Kate Chopin / Anne Rowe -- The brooding air of the past: William Faulkner / W. Kenneth Holditch -- Pilgrim in the city: Walker Percy / Lewis Lawson -- South toward freedom: Tennessee Williams / W. Kenneth Holditch -- New Orleans as a literary center: Some problems / Lewis P. Simpson.".
- catalog description "Notes that Chopin's memories of New Orleans found expression in much of her best work, including her still widely read novel The Awakening. W. Kenneth Holditch has interviewed everyone he could locate who was a member of the French Quarter's artistic colony in the 1920s in order to bring William Faulkner's stay in New Orleans to life and discuss its influence on his work. In another piece Holditch describes the creative and personal freedom Tennessee Williams found in.".
- catalog description "Percy's The Moviegoer and John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces. For professional scholar and general reader alike, this volume will be a much-appreciated resource on the literary history of the South.".
- catalog description "Region. Robert Bush writes about King's life and career, noting that she combined a political conservatism with a forward-looking attitude toward the role of women in the world. Though neither was a native of New Orleans, both Lafcadio Hearn and Kate Chopin were influenced, in different ways, by their experiences there. Hephzibah Roskelly describes the writing that emerged from the years that Hearn spent among the city's marginalized ethnic populations, and Anne Rowe.".
- catalog description "The Crescent City, which the playwright called his spiritual home. Walker Percy lived in New Orleans for only a brief period before removing himself to a more tranquil setting on the other side of Lake Pontchartrain, but, as Lewis Lawson shows, he was always fascinated by the city's complexities and contradictions. In the book's final essay Lewis P. Simpson reflects on the history of New Orleans as a literary center, with a special focus on depictions of the city in.".
- catalog extent "xv, 91 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0807117323 (cloth : alk. paper)".
- catalog isPartOf "Southern literary studies".
- catalog issued "1992".
- catalog issued "c1992.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Baton Rouge : Louisiana State University Press,".
- catalog spatial "Louisiana New Orleans".
- catalog spatial "Louisiana New Orleans.".
- catalog spatial "New Orleans (La.) In literature.".
- catalog spatial "New Orleans (La.) Intellectual life.".
- catalog subject "810.9/976335 20".
- catalog subject "American literature Louisiana New Orleans History and criticism.".
- catalog subject "Authors, American Homes and haunts Louisiana New Orleans.".
- catalog subject "PS267.N49 L58 1992".
- catalog tableOfContents "Native outsider: George Washington Cable / Alice Hall Petry -- The patrician voice: Grace King / Robert Bush -- Cultural translator: Lafcadio Hearn / Hephzibah Roskelly -- New Orleans as metaphor: Kate Chopin / Anne Rowe -- The brooding air of the past: William Faulkner / W. Kenneth Holditch -- Pilgrim in the city: Walker Percy / Lewis Lawson -- South toward freedom: Tennessee Williams / W. Kenneth Holditch -- New Orleans as a literary center: Some problems / Lewis P. Simpson.".
- catalog title "Literary New Orleans : essays and meditations / edited by Richard S. Kennedy.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "text".