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The Norton Antology of American Literature #E

The Norton Anthology of American Literature: American Literature since 1945

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Last volume (E) of the anthology of the American literature from its sixteenth-century origins to the present.

1148 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1979

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About the author

Nina Baym

39 books16 followers
Nina Baym (born 1936) was an American literary critic and literary historian. She is best known as the General Editor of the renowned The Norton Anthology of American Literature, from 1991 - 2018. She was professor of English at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign for over 40 years, from 1963 to 2004.

Baym was a scholar who asked why so few women were represented in the American literary canon, and subsequently spent her career working to correct that imbalance.

While teaching as English professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1975, Baym was writing a book about Nathaniel Hawthorne when she began to wonder why 19th-Century American literature was so male-dominated.
It was Hawthorne himself who helped pique her curiosity: in 1855, he had famously complained that "a damned mob of scribbling women" was cutting into his sales.

“I wanted to know where these women were,” she recalled in an interview with The New York Times in 1987.

She went searching through library bookshelves and 19th-century newspapers and magazines, looking for information about the absent women writers. She found plenty of novels written by women in the 1800's, and though they varied in quality, she concluded that many deserved more than obscurity.

Baym went on to author and edit of a number of groundbreaking works of American literary history and criticism, beginning with Woman's Fiction (1978), and including Feminism and American Literary History (1992), American Women Writers and the Work of History (1995), and American Women of Letters and the Nineteenth-Century Sciences (2004).
Elaine Showalter called Baym's Women Writers of the American West, 1833-1927 (2011), "The first comprehensive guide to women's writing in the old West," and proclaimed it an "immediately standard and classic text."
The book uncovers and describes the western-themed writing in diverse genres of almost 350 American women, most of them unknown today, but many of them successful and influential in their own time.

Baym was active in many professional associations, such as the American Literature Section of the Modern Language Association and the American Studies Association, as well as serving as Director of the School of Humanities at the University of Illinois from 1976-1987. She served on panels for the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Fulbight Foundation.
Among her numerous literary prizes, fellowship, and honors are the 2000 Jay B. Hubbell Award for lifetime achievement in American literary studies (from the Modern Language Association) and fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Association of University Women, and the Mellon Foundation.

Baym was born in Princeton, New Jersey in 1936; her father was the eminent mathematician Leo Zippin, and her mother was an English teacher. She received her B.A. from Cornell University, an M.A. from Radcliffe, and a Ph.D. from Harvard University.
She died in 1971.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Mert.
Author 13 books82 followers
September 25, 2020
3/5 Stars (%60/100)

I am not particularly a fan of contemporary literature so this volume did not really interest me as much as others. However, it is still very useful and I use it constantly to quote some writers. All 5 of these volumes are equally important and they all helped me in different ways. I definitely recommend this volume and the whole anthology.
9 reviews
September 24, 2014
Excellent content. It should have an e-book edition. As a physical book, the pages are rice paper thin.

However, with its excessive weight it makes a sturdy door stop.
Profile Image for Donna.
133 reviews
February 17, 2015
I had this text for Creative Writing. We only read a small number of works from it, but it seems to have a good variety. It was not at thick as the other two I had for my English classes this semester and that made it my favorite of the three if I had to choose.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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