Viser resultat for 'Erskine Caldwell'
Relevanse
God’s little acre
Erskine Caldwell
Relativt slitt eldre pocketutgave. Published by Penguin bookis. utgivelsesår er ikke oppgitt.
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1950
Engelsk
A swell looking girl : American earth
Erskine Caldwell
usikker på utgivelsesår
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1950
Engelsk
Himmellosen
Erskine Caldwell
Oeginaltittel: Journeyman
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 1950
Norsk Bokmål
Jenny - rett og slett
Erskine Caldwell
Hylle 257
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 1961
Norsk Bokmål
Call it Experience
Erskine Caldwell
This memoir presents a self-portrait of Esrkine Caldwell's first 30 years as a writer, with special emphasis on his long and hard apprenticeship before he emerged as one of the most widely read and controversial writers of his time. All the while conveying the enormous amount of drive and dedication with which he pursued the writer's life, Caldwell tells of his struggles to find his own voice, his travels and his various jobs, which ranged from back-breaking common labour to much sought-after positions in radio, film and journalism. Such literary personages as Nathanael West, Maxwell Perkins and Margaret Mitchell appear in the book, as does Margaret Bourke-White, with whom he collaborated on a number of projects and whom he also married. Including a self-interview, it offers insights into Caldwell's imagination, his sources of inspiration and his writing habits, as well as his views on critics and reviewers, publishers and booksellers.
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1996
Flerspråklig
Stor ståhei i sommervarmen
Erskine Caldwell
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 1950
Norsk Bokmål
You Have Seen Their Faces
Erskine Caldwell
In the middle years of the Great Depression, Erskine Caldwell and photographer Margaret Bourke-White spent eighteen months traveling across the back roads of the Deep South-from South Carolina to Arkansas-to document the living conditions of the sharecropper. Their collaboration resulted in You Have Seen Their Faces, a graphic portrayal of America's desperately poor rural underclass. First published in 1937, it is a classic comparable to Jacob Riis's How the Other Half Lives and James Agee and Walker Evans's Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, which it preceded by more than three years.Caldwell lets the poor speak for themselves. Supported by his commentary, they tell how the tenant system exploited whites and blacks alike and fostered animosity between them. Bourke-White, who sometimes waited hours for the right moment, captures her subjects in the shacks where they lived, the depleted fields where they plowed, and the churches where they worshipped.
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 2018
Journeyman
Erskine Caldwell
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1938
Engelsk
Guds lille Aker
Erskine Caldwell
Fin
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1954
Norsk Bokmål
Tobacco Road
Erskine Caldwell
Here is Erskine Caldwell's world-famous, earthy novel about Jeeter Lester, hos shiftless family, and their ribald adventures with the other seedy characters along the Tobacco Road.
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1956
Engelsk
Pocket · 1949
Engelsk
Forspilte chanser
Erskine Caldwell
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 1954
Norsk Bokmål
Guds lille åker
Erskine Caldwell
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1982
Norsk Bokmål
Amerika forteller: nr 2
Ernest Hemingway, Thomas Wolfe, John Steinbeck, Erskine Caldwell, med flere
Amerikanske noveller. Valgt og presentert av Gordon hølmebakk. Den norske bokklubben.
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 1973
Norsk Bokmål
Erskine Caldwell, Margaret Bourke-White, and the Popular Front
Jay Caldwell
Erskine Caldwell's novels Tobacco Road (1932) and God's Little Acre (1933) made the author a popular and critically acclaimed chronicler of the South but also a controversial one, due to his work's political themes and depictions of sexuality. Margaret Bourke-White, fresh from her role as staff photographer for Fortune, became the first female photojournalist for LIFE in 1936, and her iconic images graced its covers and helped solidify the magazine as a preeminent visual periodical.When Caldwell and Bourke-White married in 1939, they were both celebrities, popular and provocative in equal measures because of their leftist politics and their questioning of American cultural norms. They collaborated on the photo- documentary books You Have Seen Their Faces (1937), North of the Danube (1939), and Say, Is This the U.S.A. (1941). In the summer of 1941, the couple entered Russia on assignment and were there when the Germans invaded on June 22. As a result, Caldwell and Bourke-White were the rst Americans to report on the Russian war front by broadcast radio and continued to transmit almost daily newspaper articles about the Russian reaction to the war. Their international celebrity and their clout within the Soviet literary establishment provided them remarkable access to people and places during their five-month stay. Their final collaboration, Russia at War (1942), is a culmination of their work during that time.Erskine Caldwell, Margaret Bourke-White, and the Popular Front traces and analyses the couple's collaborations, the adventures that led to them, the evolving political stances that informed them, and the after-effects and influences of their work on their careers and those of others. Both biographically revealing and analytically astute, author Jay Caldwell offers a profound, new perspective on two of America's most renowned midcentury artists at the peaks of their careers.
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 2016
Georgia Boy
Erskin Caldwell
Erskine Caldwell har skrevet mange bøker. Han vokste opp i Georgia, USA. Han er kjent for sin humor og sine gode historier.
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 1943
Engelsk
Twentieth-Century Southern Literature
Authors discussed include: Wendell Berry, Erskine Caldwell, Truman Capote, Ralph Ellison, William Faulkner, Shelby Foote, Zora Neal Hurston, Bobbie Ann Mason, Cormac McCarthy, Flannery O'Connor, William Styron, Anne Tyler, Alice Walker, Robert Penn Warren, Eudora Welty, Tennessee Williams, Thomas Wolfe, Richard Wright, and many more.By World War II, the Southern Renaissance had established itself as one of the most significant literary events of the century, and today much of the best American fiction is southern fiction. Though the flowering of realistic and local-color writing during the fir
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 2015
Engelsk
Discovering the South
Jennifer Ritterhouse
In the summer of 1937, Jonathan Daniels, the young, white, liberal-minded editor of the Raleigh News and Observer, took a ten-state driving tour to ""discover"" his native land. He thought the true South lay somewhere between Erskine Caldwell's Tobacco Road and Margaret Mitchell's Gone with the Wind, and he set out to find it--ultimately interviewing even Mitchell herself.In Discovering the South historian Jennifer Ritterhouse pieces together Daniels's unpublished notes from his tour along with his published writings and a wealth of archival evidence to put this brilliant observer's journey through a South in transition into a larger context. Daniels's well-chosen itinerary brought him face to face with the full range of political and cultural possibilities in the South of the 1930s, from New Deal liberalism and social planning in the Tennessee Valley Authority, to Communist agitation in the Scottsboro case, to planters' and industrialists' reactionary worldview and repressive violence. Daniels found a region in the midst of transformation and was himself changed by the experience. Following him on his journey, Ritterhouse sketches a portrait of black and white southerners fighting for and against democratic social change at the start of the nation's long civil rights era.For more information on this book, see discoveringthesouth.org.
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 2017
The Humor of the Old South
M. Thomas. Inge
The humor of the Old South -- tales, almanac entries, turf reports, historical sketches, gentlemen's essays on outdoor sports, profiles of local characters -- flourished between 1830 and 1860. The genre's popularity and influence can be traced in the works of major southern writers such as William Faulkner, Erskine Caldwell, Eudora Welty, Flannery O'Connor, and Harry Crews, as well as in contemporary popular culture focusing on the rural South.This collection of essays includes some of the past twenty five years' best writing on the subject, as well as ten new works bringing fresh insights and
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 2015
Engelsk
Literary Obscenities
Erik M. Bachman
This comparative historical study explores the broad sociocultural factors at play in the relationships among U.S. obscenity laws and literary modernism and naturalism in the early twentieth century. Putting obscenity case law's crisis of legitimation and modernism's crisis of representation into dialogue, Erik Bachman shows how obscenity trials and other attempts to suppress allegedly vulgar writing in the United States affected a wide-ranging debate about the power of the printed word to incite emotion and shape behavior.Far from seeking simply to transgress cultural norms or sexual boundaries, Bachman argues, proscribed authors such as Wyndham Lewis, Erskine Caldwell, Lillian Smith, and James T. Farrell refigured the capacity of writing to evoke the obscene so that readers might become aware of the social processes by which they were being turned into mass consumers, voyeurs, and racialized subjects. Through such efforts, these writers participated in debates about the libidinal efficacy of language with a range of contemporaries, from behavioral psychologists and advertising executives to book cover illustrators, magazine publishers, civil rights activists, and judges.Focusing on case law and the social circumstances informing it, Literary Obscenities provides an alternative conceptual framework for understanding obscenity's subjugation of human bodies, desires, and identities to abstract social forces. It will appeal especially to scholars of American literature, American studies, and U.S. legal history.
0.0 av 5
Pocket · 2019
Innbundet · 2018
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men at 75
Michael A. Lofaro
Barely noticed upon publication in 1941, writer James Agee and photographer Walker Evans's unique chronicle of Alabama sharecroppers, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, would enjoy a remarkable revival during the 1960s. Remembering it as a "bible of sorts" for civil rights activists like himself, psychiatrist Robert Coles called it "an eloquent testimony that others had cared, had gone forth to look and hear, and had come back to stand up and address their friends and neighbors and those beyond personal knowing." The book has remained in print ever since, profoundly affecting subsequent generations of readers. In this collection, seventeen gifted essayists offer provocative new perspectives on the Agee-Evans classic, ranging from personal appreciations to computational analysis, with forays into literary, film, historical, social, and cultural criticism, among other approaches. David Moltke-Hansen examines the political context in which the book was produced, comparing it in particular to the works of Erskine Caldwell and others with more explicit agendas than Agee, while Sarah E. Gardner explores Agee's position as a southerner in the literary culture of 1930s Manhattan. Contrasting Agee's text to the uncaptioned Evans photographs that open the book, Jeffrey Couchman discusses how the writer applied a "cinematic eye" to his descriptions of the sharecroppers' homes and their possessions. In their essays, Hugh Davis, Brent Walker Cline, and David Madden link Agee with earlier writers such as Wordsworth, Schopenhauer, Dostoevsky, and Melville, while Michael Jacobs considers Agee as a forefather of the "New Journalism" championed by Tom Wolfe. Other contributors explore such disparate topics as Agee's conception of irony, the conflict of art and nature in the book, and the author's portrayal of space. Taken together, these artful elucidations of a notoriously difficult but brilliant work provide the most comprehensive and wide-ranging view of Let Us Now Praise Famous Men to date.
0.0 av 5
Innbundet · 2017
Rask levering med
Trygg betaling med
© 2025 Bookis AS
Norsk
Norge
Region er basert på IP-adresse