Prison Literature in America: The Victim as Criminal and ArtistL. Hill, 1982 - 303 sidor |
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Sida 129
... early nineteenth - century American life . Most of them are also told in the picaresque mode . They are often far more realistic than most early American fiction , and the wide - ranging activities of their rascally heroes give ...
... early nineteenth - century American life . Most of them are also told in the picaresque mode . They are often far more realistic than most early American fiction , and the wide - ranging activities of their rascally heroes give ...
Sida 133
... early twentieth century , autobiographical nar- ratives by convicted revolutionaries were rare . But by the early 1860s another kind of overlap between the two forms was begin- ning to emerge , as some common criminals began to write ...
... early twentieth century , autobiographical nar- ratives by convicted revolutionaries were rare . But by the early 1860s another kind of overlap between the two forms was begin- ning to emerge , as some common criminals began to write ...
Sida 181
... earliest in this group of contemporary criminals turned writers was Malcolm Braly . Braly was a burglar and armed robber , a four - time loser who spent almost all his early manhood , from ages eighteen to forty , in our prisons . He ...
... earliest in this group of contemporary criminals turned writers was Malcolm Braly . Braly was a burglar and armed robber , a four - time loser who spent almost all his early manhood , from ages eighteen to forty , in our prisons . He ...
Innehåll
Songs of Slavery | 73 |
A History of Literature by Convicts | 124 |
Two Novelists of the American Prison | 181 |
Upphovsrätt | |
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Prison Literature in America: The Victim as Criminal and Artist Howard Bruce Franklin Fragmentarisk förhandsgranskning - 1982 |
Prison Literature in America: The Victim as Criminal and Artist Howard Bruce Franklin Fragmentarisk förhandsgranskning - 1989 |
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Afro-American American literature American prison animal anthologies artist autobiography ballads Bartleby become Black convicts Black prisoners Black songs Blues Braly Braly's Cabiness capitalist Captain Carver chain gang chapter Chester Himes Chilly Confidence-Man consciousness convict labor crime criminal culture death detective detective fiction edition Edward Bunker escape Etheridge Knight experience False Starts fantasy fiction Frederick Douglass freedom Grave Digger Harlem Herman Melville Himes's human Ibid imprisonment jail Jim Tully John Henry Juleson killed Linda Brent literary lives Malcolm Malcolm X Melville Melville's Moby-Dick murder narrator Nat Turner Negro night nonwhite novel oppression parole Penitentiary picaresque poem poetic poetry political prison literature published readers rebellion revolutionary sailors San Quentin singing slave narrative slave songs slavery society South stanzas story tells tion vision whaling white convicts William Wells Brown woman women words workers writing written York