About This Book
The essay surveys the absence of a single American literary center, arguing that national writing has been decentralized and often regionally rooted. It traces earlier concentrations in Philadelphia, New York, and Boston and contends that a true national literature emerged after the Civil War as voices from the Pacific Coast, the Midwest, the South, and New England gained prominence. The author profiles regional movements and writers — San Francisco humorists, New England realists, Southern and Western chroniclers, and urban New York dramatists and novelists — and concludes that the chief strength of this dispersion is its honesty and fidelity to varied American life.
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