Twisted from the ordinary : essays on American literary naturalism. [1-57233-223-9]
Tennessee Studies in Literature vol 40
http://worldcat.org/oclc/50960823
The Silent Partnership: Naturalism and Sentimentalism in the Novels of Rebecca Harding Davis and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps / Sara Britton Goodling 1
Performative Passages: Davis's Life in the Iron Mills, Crane's Maggie, and Norris's McTeague / William Dow 23
Stephen Crane and the Transformation of the Bowery / Robert M. Dowling 45
Is There a Doctor in the House? Norris's Naturalist Gaze of Clinical Observation in McTeague / Daniel Schierenbeck 63
McTeague: Naturalism, Legal Stealing, and the Anti-Gift / Hildegard Hoeller 86
"The Signs and Symbols of the West": Frank Norris, The Octopus, and the Naturalization of Market Capitalism / Adam H. Wood 107
No Green Card Needed: Dreiserian Naturalism and Proletarian Female Whiteness / Laura Hapke 128
Coon Shows, Ragtime, and the Blues: Race, Urban Culture, and the Naturalist Vision in Paul Laurence Dunbar's The Sport of the Gods / Nancy Von Rosk 144
"Working" Towards a Sense of Agency: Determinism in The Wings of the Dove / Brannon W. Costello 169
Assaulting the Yeehats: Violence and Space in The Call of the Wild / James R. Giles 188
"Violent Movements of Business": The Moral Nihilist as Economic Man in Jack London's The Sea-Wolf / David K. Heckerl 202
Highbrow/Lowbrow: Naturalist Writers and the "Reading Habit" / Barbara Hochman 217
The "Bitter Taste" of Naturalism: Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth and David Graham Phillips's Susan Lenox / Donna M. Campbell 237
"Hunting for the Real": Responses to Art in Edith Wharton's Custom of the Country / Lilian R. Furst 260
Turning Zola Inside Out: Jane Addams and Literary Naturalism / Katherine Joslin 276
Oppressive Bodies: Victorianism, Feminism, and Naturalism in Evelyn Scott's The Narrow House / Tim Edwards 289
Fear, Consumption, and Desire: Naturalism and Ann Petry's The Street / Kecia Driver McBride 304
Naturalism's Middle Ages: The Evolution of the American True-Crime Novel, 1930-1960 / Lana A. Whited 323
From Determinism to Indeterminacy: Chaos Theory, Systems Theory, and the Discourse of Naturalism / Mohamed Zayani 344
Whither Naturalism? / Philip Gerber 367
Is American Literary Naturalism Dead? A Futher Inquiry / Donald Pizer
Performative Passages: Davis's Life in the Iron Mills, Crane's Maggie, and Norris's McTeague / William Dow 23
Stephen Crane and the Transformation of the Bowery / Robert M. Dowling 45
Is There a Doctor in the House? Norris's Naturalist Gaze of Clinical Observation in McTeague / Daniel Schierenbeck 63
McTeague: Naturalism, Legal Stealing, and the Anti-Gift / Hildegard Hoeller 86
"The Signs and Symbols of the West": Frank Norris, The Octopus, and the Naturalization of Market Capitalism / Adam H. Wood 107
No Green Card Needed: Dreiserian Naturalism and Proletarian Female Whiteness / Laura Hapke 128
Coon Shows, Ragtime, and the Blues: Race, Urban Culture, and the Naturalist Vision in Paul Laurence Dunbar's The Sport of the Gods / Nancy Von Rosk 144
"Working" Towards a Sense of Agency: Determinism in The Wings of the Dove / Brannon W. Costello 169
Assaulting the Yeehats: Violence and Space in The Call of the Wild / James R. Giles 188
"Violent Movements of Business": The Moral Nihilist as Economic Man in Jack London's The Sea-Wolf / David K. Heckerl 202
Highbrow/Lowbrow: Naturalist Writers and the "Reading Habit" / Barbara Hochman 217
The "Bitter Taste" of Naturalism: Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth and David Graham Phillips's Susan Lenox / Donna M. Campbell 237
"Hunting for the Real": Responses to Art in Edith Wharton's Custom of the Country / Lilian R. Furst 260
Turning Zola Inside Out: Jane Addams and Literary Naturalism / Katherine Joslin 276
Oppressive Bodies: Victorianism, Feminism, and Naturalism in Evelyn Scott's The Narrow House / Tim Edwards 289
Fear, Consumption, and Desire: Naturalism and Ann Petry's The Street / Kecia Driver McBride 304
Naturalism's Middle Ages: The Evolution of the American True-Crime Novel, 1930-1960 / Lana A. Whited 323
From Determinism to Indeterminacy: Chaos Theory, Systems Theory, and the Discourse of Naturalism / Mohamed Zayani 344
Whither Naturalism? / Philip Gerber 367
Is American Literary Naturalism Dead? A Futher Inquiry / Donald Pizer
Transport and Sustainability: The Role of the Built Environment
Authors: Randall Crane and Lisa A. ScweitzerPage start: 238
Built Environment
Volume: 29 | Issue: 3 New Urbanism
Cover date: September 2003
New Urbanism attempts to promote ‘greener’ travel through physical design: especially through the provision of compact, walkable neighbourhoods served by transit. Achieving the desired environmental benefits effectively hinges on reducing auto trips, by encouraging people who currently travel by car to switch to walking for short trips and transit for long trips. However, while these aims may be simply asserted, the extent to which they are achievable is complex. The sustainability debate now goes well beyond merely technical discussions of environmental impacts to tackle the stickier political economy of how cities can be made to work in terms of accessibility, how environmental costs and benefits are distributed, and the concept of ‘environmental justice’. Who goes where, based on where they live and work, and the land-use levers available to affect why, have become the core policy focus. In order to understand the extent to which New Urbanism can contribute to sustainable transport and development, it is necessary to consider how different social groups using different modes of transport are related to the design of the built environment.
tagged Crane Scweitzer city_planning new_urbanism transportation sustainabilty environmental_justice built_environment
by jn
...on 21-JUN-07
American realism : new essays / edited by Eric J. Sundquist. [0801827965] Baltimore, Md. : Johns Hopkins University Press, c1982.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS374.R37 A47
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS374.R37 A47
Donald Pease, "Fear, Rage, and the Mistrials of Representation in The Red Badge of Courage"
A concise definition of naturalism appears in the introduction In that piece,"The Country of the Blue," Eric Sundquist writes,
"Revelling in the extraordinary, the excessive, and the grotesque in order to reveal the immutable bestiality of Man in Nature, naturalism dramatizes the loss of individuality at a physiological level by making a Calvinism without God its determining order and violent death its utopia" (p. 13).
William Cain "Presence and Power in Mcteague"


