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American Literature 1865–1914
- Regionalist literature, written by authors such as Bret
Harte and Hamlin Garland, as well as women including Sarah
Orne Jewett, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Mary E. Wilkins, Sui
Sin Far, and Constance Fenimore Woolson might have helped
pave the way for the upsurge in the regionally focused literature
of U.S. modernism. (See “American Literature between
the Wars 1914–1945,” pages 1081–82.)
- The transcontinental railroad, built with immigrant labor,
is portrayed by Frank Norris as an “octopus”
that threatened to decimate the “American” way
of life. Herman Melville’s Moby Dick is one
of a few works of early literature that acknowledges how
and why immigrant labor helped U.S. capitalists, the “captains
of industry,” and corporations to make strides in
the world of technology and industry. (See “American
Literature, 1820–1865,” pages 970–71.)
- The work of Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois
helped create a space for African Americans of later generations—particularly
writers of the Harlem Renaissance such as Hughes, Larsen,
Hurston—to speak about the distinctiveness of African
American racial and ethnic experiences. (See “American
Literature between the Wars, 1914–1945,” pages
1082–83.)
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