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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Monika Elbert , Monika Elbert , Wendy Ryden , Wendy RydenPublisher: The University of Alabama Press Imprint: The University of Alabama Press Dimensions: Width: 14.90cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.363kg ISBN: 9780817360597ISBN 10: 081736059 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 31 July 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""No book before Haunting Realities has explored the relationship between the Gothic and the modes of Realism and Naturalism, which are apparently antithetical to it. Yet, in the central paradox identified by Elbert and Ryden, Gothic tropes are everywhere in the literature of the post-Civil War period, and reveal much about the age's crisis of faith in progress--and about our own times as well. This is a wide-ranging and thoughtful collection and will be studied by anyone interested in the Gothic and the literature of the United States."" --Charles L. Crow, author of History of the Gothic: American Gothic and editor of American Gothic: An Anthology, 1787-1916 ""This wide-ranging, thoughtfully curated collection of essays examines late-19th-century American writing in the naturalist mode that contains gothic elements. Though not all readers will be interested in all the essays, each essay has a unique perspective on the book's themes. This collection will appeal particularly to specialists, but those enthusiastic about the influence of gothic literature may also find it worthwhile. Recommended."" --CHOICE ""For those of us who remain haunted by the perspicacity and terror informing late nineteenth-century American literature, Haunting Realities is an important book about cultural crisis, then and now."" --Studies in American Naturalism ""Haunting Realities is an interesting and compelling collection that offers a new and fascinating perspective on the influence of the Gothic on Naturalist texts."" --Keith Newlin, author of Hamlin Garland: A Life and editor of The Oxford Handbook of American Literary Naturalism" No book before Haunting Realities has explored the relationship between the Gothic and the modes of Realism and Naturalism, which are apparently antithetical to it. Yet, in the central paradox identified by Elbert and Ryden, Gothic tropes are everywhere in the literature of the post-Civil War period, and reveal much about the age's crisis of faith in progress--and about our own times as well. This is a wide-ranging and thoughtful collection and will be studied by anyone interested in the Gothic and the literature of the United States. --Charles L. Crow, author of History of the Gothic: American Gothic and editor of American Gothic: An Anthology, 1787-1916 This wide-ranging, thoughtfully curated collection of essays examines late-19th-century American writing in the naturalist mode that contains gothic elements. Though not all readers will be interested in all the essays, each essay has a unique perspective on the book's themes. This collection will appeal particularly to specialists, but those enthusiastic about the influence of gothic literature may also find it worthwhile. Recommended. --CHOICE For those of us who remain haunted by the perspicacity and terror informing late nineteenth-century American literature, Haunting Realities is an important book about cultural crisis, then and now. --Studies in American Naturalism Haunting Realities is an interesting and compelling collection that offers a new and fascinating perspective on the influence of the Gothic on Naturalist texts. --Keith Newlin, author of Hamlin Garland: A Life and editor of The Oxford Handbook of American Literary Naturalism ""No book before Haunting Realities has explored the relationship between the Gothic and the modes of Realism and Naturalism, which are apparently antithetical to it. Yet, in the central paradox identified by Elbert and Ryden, Gothic tropes are everywhere in the literature of the post-Civil War period, and reveal much about the age's crisis of faith in progress--and about our own times as well. This is a wide-ranging and thoughtful collection and will be studied by anyone interested in the Gothic and the literature of the United States."" --Charles L. Crow, author of History of the Gothic: American Gothic and editor of American Gothic: An Anthology, 1787-1916 ""This wide-ranging, thoughtfully curated collection of essays examines late-19th-century American writing in the naturalist mode that contains gothic elements. Though not all readers will be interested in all the essays, each essay has a unique perspective on the book's themes. This collection will appeal particularly to specialists, but those enthusiastic about the influence of gothic literature may also find it worthwhile. Recommended."" --CHOICE ""For those of us who remain haunted by the perspicacity and terror informing late nineteenth-century American literature, Haunting Realities is an important book about cultural crisis, then and now."" --Studies in American Naturalism ""Haunting Realities is an interesting and compelling collection that offers a new and fascinating perspective on the influence of the Gothic on Naturalist texts."" --Keith Newlin, author of Hamlin Garland: A Life and editor of The Oxford Handbook of American Literary Naturalism Author InformationMonika Elbert is a professor of English at Montclair State University and coeditor of Romantic Education in Nineteenth-Century American Literature: National and Transatlantic Contexts and Transnational Gothic: Literary and Social Exchanges in the Long Nineteenth Century. Wendy Ryden is an associate professor of English at Long Island University Post and coauthor of Reading, Writing, and the Rhetorics of Whiteness. 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