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Carl Van Doren
>
The American Novel
>
Subject Index
> Page 137
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CONTENTS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
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SUBJECT INDEX
Carl Van Doren
(18851950).
The American Novel.
1921.
Page 137
new planetaries; he was one of the most widely-read of Americans. As his curiosity never grew faint, so never did his pen, but kept up its amazing productivity without damage to the smooth surface of his style and the bland cheerfulness of his disposition.
His principal limitationhis chariness of passion and tragedydid not entirely reveal itself in the novels which he wrote during the
Atlantic
period. Like Henry James in those same years, Howells was at first concerned with the contrast between different manners or grades of sophisticationa conflict to which his own sojourn as an American in Italy and as a Westerner in Boston had made him sensitive.
A Foregone Conclusion
(1875) and
A Fearful Responsibility
(1881) show American and Italian manners in conflict;
Private Theatricals
(published in the
Atlantic
in 187576 as a serial but never issued in a separate volume) and
The Lady of the Aroostook
(1879) set the social habits of the American village in contrast with those of the American city;
An Undiscovered Country
(1880) takes its characters through contact with spiritualism and Shakerism, making clear Howellss disagreement with those forms of otherworldliness;
Dr. Breens Practice
(1881) is the story of a womans struggle to make a place for herself in the medical profession against the stupid resistance of a public which has no objection except that women are new in that profession. Devoted as all these were to the transcription and criticism of the lighter manners of the age, they could hardly be censured for not going deeper, especially since they did what they set out to do with such ease, such dexterity, such revealing humor, such shrewd and illuminating comment. It appeared,
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