| Volume 2, Number 2 |
Winter 2007 |
|
|
|
CONTENTS
|
|
ESSAYS |
|
Donald Pizer
The Bread Line: An American Icon of Hard Times |
103 |
Karen A. Keely
Sexual Slavery in San Francisco’s Chinatown: “Yellow Peril”
and “White Slavery” in Frank Norris’s Early Fiction |
129 |
Laura Bedwell
Jack London’s “Samuel” and the Abstract Shrine of Truth |
150 |
Christopher Taylor
“Inescapably Propaganda”: Re-Classifying Upton Sinclair
outside the Naturalist Tradition |
166 |
REVIEWS |
|
Edith
Wharton, by Hermione Lee
Reviewed by Donna Campbell |
179 |
Slumming in New York: From the Waterfront to Mythic
Harlem,
by Robert M. Dowling
Reviewed by Dan Colson |
184 |
Stephen
Crane, by Kevin J. Hayes
Reviewed by Carolyn Stoermer |
186 |
Nineteenth-Century American Fiction on
Screen,
edited by R. Barton Palmer
Reviewed by Roger W. Smith |
188 |
Can Anything Beat White? A Black Family’s
Letters,
compiled and edited by Elisabeth Petry
Reviewed by Sharon Lynette Jones |
191 |
After Utopia: The Rise of Critical Space in Twentieth-Century
American Fiction,
by Nicholas Spencer
Reviewed by Kevin J. Hayes |
194 |
CONTRIBUTORS |
198 |
| |
|
|
|
|