Early Cooper and His AudienceColumbia University Press, 1986 - Počet stran: 230 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-3 z 27
Strana 38
... volumes was in circulation . By comparison , the Columbia College library , which of course was not open to the public , owned 2,249 volumes in 1800 , and the private Society Library had some 6,500 volumes.19 Caritat had succeeded in ...
... volumes was in circulation . By comparison , the Columbia College library , which of course was not open to the public , owned 2,249 volumes in 1800 , and the private Society Library had some 6,500 volumes.19 Caritat had succeeded in ...
Strana 77
... volume - the first contains twenty five Chapters - in the whole volume ( i.e. the first ) one hundred and twelve closely written pages of about eight Hun- dred words each - this I compute will make an ordinary volume , such as Ivanhoe ...
... volume - the first contains twenty five Chapters - in the whole volume ( i.e. the first ) one hundred and twelve closely written pages of about eight Hun- dred words each - this I compute will make an ordinary volume , such as Ivanhoe ...
Strana 78
... volumes ? What would be the expense of printing an edition of a thousand copies in the style of the Philadelphia ... volume novels . The length of Cooper's works now seems prohibitive beside the economy of The Scarlet Letter , but it ...
... volumes ? What would be the expense of printing an edition of a thousand copies in the style of the Philadelphia ... volume novels . The length of Cooper's works now seems prohibitive beside the economy of The Scarlet Letter , but it ...
Obsah
Toward a Democratic Fiction | 1 |
The Failure of Charles Brockden Brown | 29 |
An American Novel Professedly | 63 |
Autorská práva | |
Další části 3 nejsou zobrazeny.
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
already American American novel appearance artist attempt audience become beginning British Brown called chapter characters common Cooper created critics culture death developed early edition Edwards effect England English exists expectations expression fact father fiction friends hand Henry hero human imagination important incidents Indian influence interest James John Journal Judge kind less letter literary literature live manners means mind moral narrative Natty nature never notes novel novelist object opening original patriotism Pioneers plot political popular practice Precaution preface present Press principles printed produced published Quoted reader reading reason relation remarkable represented result Richard romance scene seems sense social society success suggest tale taste Temple thought tion tradition true University Press vision volume Wieland writing wrote York