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Reference
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Cambridge History
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Later National Literature, Part II
>
The Later Novel: Howells
> Contemporaries
Jack London
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVII. Later National Literature, Part II.
XI.
The Later Novel: Howells
.
§ 33. Contemporaries.
A real, however narrow, gulf separates London from such colleagued naturalists as Richard Harding Davis, better in short stories
36
than in novels, and often romantic, or even from David Graham Phillips (18671911), whose bitter war upon society and Society culminated in the two volumes of
Susan Lenox
(1917), the only extended portrait of an American courtesan No one of them all had quite Londons boyish energy, quite his romantic audacity in naturalism. And the tendency of fiction is just at present away from the world of elemental excitement to more civil phases of life, a newer form of realism having succeeded alike the episode of naturalism and the antithetical episode of historical romance. At the same time there are still novels of many types: domestic and sentimental romances; tales of wild adventure; stories written to exploit a single character in the tradition of F. Hopkinson Smiths
37
Colonel Carter of Cartersville
(1891), Edward Noyes Westcotts
David Harum
(1898), and Owen Wisters
The Virginian
(1905); a few records of exotic life at the ends of the earth; narratives, nicely skirting salaciousness, of fast New York; affectionate, idealized portrayals, as in the work of James Lane Allen for Kentucky, of particular states or neighbourhoods. But no tendency quite so clearly prevails as romance in the thirties, sentimentalism in the fifties, realism in the eighties, or naturalism at the turn of the century.
38
Note 36
.
Ibid.
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Note 37
. See Book III, Chap. VI.
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CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Jack London
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