A responsive, refreshed, and media-rich revision of the market-leading anthology of American literature.
The most-trusted anthology for complete works, balanced selections, and helpful editorial apparatus, The Norton Anthology of American Literature features a cover-to-cover revision. The Ninth Edition introduces new General Editor Robert Levine and three new-generation editors who have reenergized the volume across the centuries. Fresh scholarship, new authors―with an emphasis on contemporary writers―new topical clusters, and a new ebook make the Norton Anthology an even better teaching tool and an unmatched value for students.
Robert S. Levine (Ph.D. Stanford University 1981) is Distinguished University Professor of English and Distinguished Scholar-Teacher at the University of Maryland, College Park. Levine is the General Editor of The Norton Anthology of American Literature and is a member of the editorial boards of American Literary History, Leviathan: A Journal of Melville Studies, and J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists.
I suggest you read my reviews for Volume A and Volume B before moving into this. In this volume, we start with the aftermath of the Civil War. The black literature has changed and many new black writers have emerged. American literature is much more unique and relevant in the world. This is another great volume for especially American literature students.
The era of interest in American literature is a little enervated unless you're really big on Whitman (like Harold Bloom).
Here are the major figures whose literary work is featured: 1) Walt Whitman 2) Emily Dickinson 3) Mark Twain 4) Ambrose Bierce 5) Henry James 6) Edith Wharton 7) Stephen Crane 8) Jack London
There are other important figures but some of these are included for historical or cultural reasons rather than aesthetic reasons and I'm not sure some of the inclusion actually qualify as literature. I plan to return to this anthology to dig into the lesser known figures more.
Good collection of works from 1865-ish to 1914, including classics like Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, and often overlooked Native American writings.