Chicago
A Literary History
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:23rd Sep '21
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The book provides an inclusive, engaging, innovative, and interdisciplinary overview of the often overlooked literary history of Chicago.
This book will be of value to anyone interested in Chicago literature and history, as well as American or urban literature in general. The book places Chicago at the center of American urban literature and shows how the city's writers were central to the development and incorporation or urban themes.Chicago occupies a central position in both the geography and literary history of the United States. From its founding in 1833 through to its modern incarnation, the city has served as both a thoroughfare for the nation's goods and a crossroads for its cultural energies. The idea of Chicago as a crossroads of modern America is what guides this literary history, which traces how writers have responded to a rapidly changing urban environment and labored to make sense of its place in - and implications for - the larger whole. In writing that engages with the world's first skyscrapers and elevated railroads, extreme economic and racial inequality, a growing middle class, ethnic and multiethnic neighborhoods, the Great Migration of African Americans, and the city's contemporary incarnation as a cosmopolitan urban center, Chicago has been home to a diverse literature that has both captured and guided the themes of modern America.
ISBN: 9781108477512
Dimensions: 235mm x 158mm x 32mm
Weight: 840g
350 pages