Stephen CraneStephen Crane provides a general overview of all of Stephen Crane's major works, and many of his minor ones. It seeks to understand the many literary genres in which Crane wrote: newspaper journalism, novels, poetry, sketch and short story. After a brief biographical introduction, the chapters are organised in a chronological fashion and trace Crane's development as a writer from the early newspaper contributions to Maggie, his first novel, and The Black Riders, his first collection of verse. Subsequent chapters consider the work that arguably shaped Crane's reputation - The Third Violet and The Red Badge of Courage and his short stories. The Red Badge of Courage was recognised by many as the finest war novel in English, and Crane subsequently devoted much effort to writing more about the war. Another chapter treats his war correspondence, and the conclusion returns to the subject of war to examine how wars have helped to shape Crane's popular and critical reception. |
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Furthermore , Crane's narrative point of view reinforces Henry's viewpoint . Though told from the third person , Red Badge is usually focalized from Henry's perspective . In other words , a third - person narrator articulates Henry's ...
Furthermore , Crane's narrative point of view reinforces Henry's viewpoint . Though told from the third person , Red Badge is usually focalized from Henry's perspective . In other words , a third - person narrator articulates Henry's ...
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point of view and diction and offer the opportunity to scrutinize his unique style . ' A Man and Some Others ' , less frequently studied nowadays than Crane's other major tales , was greatly admired at the time of its initial appearance ...
point of view and diction and offer the opportunity to scrutinize his unique style . ' A Man and Some Others ' , less frequently studied nowadays than Crane's other major tales , was greatly admired at the time of its initial appearance ...
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Telling the story of his own experiences in an open boat in the form of a personal account , Crane had little choice in the matter but to tell it in the first person , yet even this point of view he seems reluctant to accept .
Telling the story of his own experiences in an open boat in the form of a personal account , Crane had little choice in the matter but to tell it in the first person , yet even this point of view he seems reluctant to accept .
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American literature appeared Appleton artist audiences Badge of Courage battle become behaviour Billie Billie's Black Riders Blue Hotel Brian Winston British camera obscura chapter cinema colour contemporary Cora Crane moves Crane observes critical depicts dime novels dispatches Dr Trescott emblems Émile Zola entropy environment experience eyes fiction flag Fragment of Velestino George's Mother girl Grace Graeco-Turkish Greece Henry Binder Henry's Hoffman Hollanden hunting imagination Jimmie Joseph Conrad killing legends literary literary realism little man's Little Regiment Maggie Maggie's Monster mosque motion pictures moving images narrative narrator newspaper Open Boat painted panoramas Pete poems point of view popular culture Port Jervis published Quick readers realism Red Badge remain reputation scene Seduced and abandoned seems sentence soldier Stephen Crane streets suggests Sullivan County sketches Swede tenement Third Violet Tom Quick Velestino viii visual W viii Whilomville Whitman's wild hogs women words wounded writing