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Related Articles
- THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR. Munson, James // Contemporary Review;Apr87, Vol. 250 Issue 1455, p218
Reviews the book "Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War," by Edmund Wilson.
- The Right to Secede from History. Lynn, Kenneth S. // New Republic;6/25/62, Vol. 146 Issue 26, p21
Reviews the book "Patriotic Gore, Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War," by Edmund Wilson.
- Edmund Wilson's Epigraphs to Patriotic Gore. Dugan, Lawrence // Notes & Queries;Sep2009, Vol. 56 Issue 3, p426
The article focuses on the epigraphs to the book "Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War," by Edmund Wilson. The first epigraph is said to be attributed to American abolitionist John Brown, whose role in the abolitionist movement was also referenced in numerous...
- US Civil War Print Culture and Popular Imagination. Richards, Eliza // American Literary History;Summer2005, Vol. 17 Issue 2, p349
Presents several books on civil war. "Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War," by Edmund Wilson; "Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory," by David Blight; "The Imagined Civil War: Popular Literature of the North and South, 1861-1865," by Alice Fahs; "To...
- THE HISTORICAL ROMANCE. Menand, Louis // New Yorker;3/24/2003, Vol. 79 Issue 5, p78
Focuses on the book 'To the Finland Station,' by Edmund Wilson. Account of the inclination of Wilson to communism; Depiction of Vladimir Lenin in the book as a hero; Publication of the book by Harcourt Brace in September 1940; Sales performance of the book.
- the literary worker. Allen, Bruce // Kirkus Reviews;10/1/2007, Vol. 75 Issue 19, p1006
This article explains that Edmund Wilson's, the late U.S. literary critic, wish for the country to have a standard editions of the works of major American writers has been realized. Generous grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Ford Foundation helped set in motion an...
- Reunion. Wilson, Edmund // New Republic;4/27/27, Vol. 50 Issue 647, p275
Presents a short story "Reunion," by Edmund Wilson.
- A Conversation with EDMUND WILSON "We Don't Know Where We Are )? Brandon, Henry // New Republic;3/30/59, Vol. 140 Issue 13, p13
The article presents an interview with writer Edmund Wilson. Wilson thinks that there has always been a good deal in common between the Russians and Americans. According to Wilson, the whole world is getting to be more alike in certain ways. We are all having to deal with more or less the same...
- In the Tradition from Emerson. Matthiessen, F. O. // New Republic;4/6/38, Vol. 94 Issue 1218, p279
Reviews the book "The Triple Thinkers: Ten Essays on Literature," by Edmund Wilson.