Search Results - "Edgar Allan Poe"
Suggested Topics within your search.
Suggested Topics within your search.
- American fiction 4
- Histoire 4
- Histoire et critique 4
- History 4
- History and criticism 4
- Roman americain 4
- Americains dans la litterature 2
- Didactic fiction, American 2
- Gothic fiction (Literary genre) 2
- Gothic revival (Literature) 2
- Homicide dans la litterature 2
- Homicide in literature 2
- Horror tales, American 2
- Influence 2
- Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) 2
- Literatur 2
- Literature and society 2
- Litterature et societe 2
- Litterature frenetique 2
- Meurtre dans la litterature 2
- Mord 2
- Murder in literature 2
- National characteristics, American, in literature 2
- Puritan movements in literature 2
- Puritanisme dans la litterature 2
- Recits d'horreur americains 2
- Religion and literature 2
- Religion et litterature 2
- Roman didactique americain 2
- Roman gothique 2
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1
Homicide in American Fiction, 1798–1860 : A Study in Social Values
Published 1957Table of Contents: Full text available:
Electronic eBook -
2
Homicide in American Fiction, 1798–1860 : A Study in Social Values
Published 1957Table of Contents: Full text available:
Electronic eBook -
3
America's Gothic Fiction : The Legacy of Magnalia Christi Americana /
Published 2007Table of Contents: “…"We have seen strange things to day" : the history and artistry of Cotton Mather's remarkables -- "A wilderness of error" : Edgar Allan Poe's revision of providential tropes -- Cotton Mather as the "old New England grandmother" : Harriet Beecher Stowe and the female historian -- Nathaniel Hawthorne and the "singular mind" of Cotton Mather -- "The story was in the gaps" : Catharine Maria Sedgwick and Edith Wharton.…”
Full text available:
Electronic eBook -
4
America's Gothic Fiction : The Legacy of Magnalia Christi Americana /
Published 2007Table of Contents: “…"We have seen strange things to day" : the history and artistry of Cotton Mather's remarkables -- "A wilderness of error" : Edgar Allan Poe's revision of providential tropes -- Cotton Mather as the "old New England grandmother" : Harriet Beecher Stowe and the female historian -- Nathaniel Hawthorne and the "singular mind" of Cotton Mather -- "The story was in the gaps" : Catharine Maria Sedgwick and Edith Wharton.…”
Full text available:
Electronic eBook