Kazin on Dreiser: What it Means to be a Literary Critic |
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Authors: | Email author" target="_blank">William?E?CainEmail author |
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Institution: | 1.Department of English,Wellesley College,Wellesley,USA |
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Abstract: | Throughout his career as a literary critic, Alfred Kazin wrote often and with sympathy and insight about Theodore Dreiser, one of the most powerful, panoramic, and compassionate novelists in American literary history. Kazin was an intense reader and writer, committed in his books, essays, and reviews to connecting with and describing the personality of each author he examined. His interpretive work on Dreiser illuminates what it means to be a literary critic and teacher. When we read Kazin in the midst of twenty-first century theory, ideology, and professionalism, we realize all the more clearly the goal in his literary criticism that he aimed for, achieved, and represented—and that now is missing from literary education and experience. |
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