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Literature Criticism
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From: Cahiers de la Nouvelle/Journal of the Short Story in English[(essay date autumn 2000) In the following essay, Cherciu explores Freeman's often-used theme of the "ludicrous courtship"--a relationship that goes terribly and humorously awry--in the stories "Juliza" and "One Good...
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From: The Pluralistic Philosophy of Stephen Crane[(essay date 1993) In the following excerpt, Dooley examines Crane's poetry and contends that the author's philosophy is theistic, not nihilistic, agnostic, or atheist, as it is often characterized by critics.] I...
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From: Arizona Quarterly[(essay date autumn 2000) In the following essay, Morgan explores the constitution of white masculinity in "The Monster" and how this is called into question through division of community.] "The Monster" (1897) was...
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From: Journal of the Short Story in English[(essay date autumn 2000) In the following essay, Cherciu evaluates Freeman's humorous critique of traditional courtship rituals in "Juliza" and "One Good Time," and comments on Narcissa Stone's obsession with clothing.]...
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From: Studies in American Fiction[(essay date spring 1998) In the following essay, McMurray argues that Stephen Crane's novella The Monster recalls the 1892 lynching of Robert Lewis in Crane's hometown.] The critical history of Stephen Crane's story...
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From: Arizona Quarterly[(essay date spring 2006) In the following essay, Naito examines the function of electricity and technology in The Monster, asserting that because Henry Johnson, the protagonist, is in a position to gain the most from...
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From: Arizona Quarterly[(essay date spring 2006) In this essay, Naito analyzes the importance of electricity to the text of "The Monster," concentrating in particular on how late-twentieth-century innovations in electricity are related to...
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From: Studies in American Fiction[(essay date spring 1998) In the following essay, McMurray provides a historical reading of "The Monster."] The critical history of Stephen Crane's story of a black man who becomes a social outcast after his face is...