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AMERICAN LITERATURE

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Whichbook | A new way of choosing what book to read next. The Complete Works of William Shakespeare. American Memory from the Library of Congress - Home Page. The Official Web Site of Mark Twain. Helen Hayes, Raymond Loewy and Mark Twain Honored on 2011 U.S.

Stamps 12/30/10 Three CMG clients will be part of the U.S. Postal Service's 2011 Commemorative Stamp Program. This year's CMG honorees are actress Helen Hayes, industrial designer Raymond Loewy and author Mark Twain. These legends are three of 25 subjects highlighted in the stamp program, which was unveiled on Dec. 28. To view the ... The Official Web Site of Mark Twain has everything you want to know about this literary icon. The Community section is a great place to download FREE desktop wallpapers and screen savers. CMG Worldwide is the exclusive business representative for the Estate of Mark Twain.

Visit the Official Store for books, CDs and video! American Authors. American Literature. American Writers. Popular American Literature Books. American Writers. American Literature Sites. Home | Literary Movements | Timeline | American Authors | American Literature Sites | Bibliographies | Site Updates American Literature Sites (undergoing updates & a change of format) Common-Place is an online journal sponsored by the American Antiquarian Society; it features excellent articles on American history and culture. The Nineteenth-Century American Women Writers Web. This major site features links from the journal Legacy, pictures of American women writers, online texts, and other resources. Voices from the Gaps: Women Writers of Color. This site includes biographical information and bibliographies on contemporary writers, but some nineteenth-century subjects are covered as well.

General Literature Sites Victorian Web. Digital Projects Books Online Note: Because of copyright restrictions, only works published prior to 1923 and those made available by the copyright holder are available for free online. Google Books. Nineteenth-Century Periodicals and Primary Sources. American Literature | Short Stories and Classic Literature. The American Novel . Literary Timeline . Movements . Postmodernism. Variously defined, "postmodernism" can refer to a historical period that began in the 1940s, a style of literature, philosophy, art, and architecture, or the situation of Western society in a late capitalist or postcapitalist age. The French theorist Jean-François Lyotard succinctly defined postmodernism as "incredulity towards metanarratives"; that is, a skepticism toward the "grand narratives" that seek to explain and plot human life and history.

Literary postmodernism is generally characterized by features such as: a mixing of styles ("high" and "low," for example) in the same text; discontinuity of tone, point of view, register, and logical sequence; apparently random unexpected intrusions and disruptions in the text; a self-consciousness about language and literary technique, especially concerning the use of metaphor and symbol, and the use of self-referential tropes. The American writers most typically termed postmodernist are Vladimir Nabokov (1899-1977), William S.