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American Narrative Realism: The Novel, Film, Television, and Theater (Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture)

By David R. Shumway

Criticism

Synthetic audio, Automated braille

Summary

Realism has been disparaged for over a hundred years as an outmoded form, and, more recently, as a pernicious illusion, typical of nineteenth-century novels and Hollywood movies alike. After a long period of disrepute, realism has had in recent years… something of a revival among critics and theorists. Yet this revival still represents a minority, and much of the old critique of realism remains taken for granted. This book treats realism as a persistent aspect of narrative in American culture, especially after World War II. It does not seek to elevate realism above other forms of fictional narrative – that is, to restore it to some real or imagined past supremacy. Rather, the goal is to reclaim realism as a narrative practice that has remained vital despite a long history of critical disapproval, by showing how it functions in significant recent works across media.

Title Details

ISBN 9781009660112
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Copyright Date 2026
Book number 6896819
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American Narrative Realism: The Novel, Film, Television, and Theater (Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture)

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