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Reveals the interrelated literary genres of autobiography, criticism, and poetry as psychological modes encompassing the interplay of Robert Penn Warren's life and work in his later nonfiction. Joseph Millichap also shows how Warren's engagement with major American authors often centred on the ways their creative work intersected with their lives.
Celebrates and interprets the complementary expressions of photography and literature in the South. Focusing on the 1930s, and including significant works both before and after this preeminent decade, Joseph Millichap uncovers fascinating convergences between mediums, particularly in the interplay of documentary realism and subjective modernism.
Despite critical acclaim for Robert Penn Warren's later poetry, much about this large body of work remains unexplored, especially the psychological sources of these poems' remarkable energy. Joseph Millichap takes advantage of research on developmental psychology, gerontology, and end-of-life studies to offer new readings of Warren's later poems.
In Unchained Voices, Vincent Carretta has assembled the most comprehensive anthology ever published of writings by eighteenth-century people of African descent, enabling many of these authors to be heard for the first time in two centuries.
In recent decades, Latino immigration has transformed communities and cultures throughout the southeastern United States-and become the focus of a sometimes furious national debate. Examining Latino migration at the local, state, national, and binational levels, this book includes studies of southeastern locales and a statewide overview of Tennessee.
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