Cather Studies, Volume 3
Edited by Susan J. RosowskiLincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1996
Table of Contents
The Ideology of Cather's Catholic Progressivism: Death Comes for the
Archbishop by Guy Reynolds
"Grande Communications avec Dieu": The Surrounding Power of Shadows
on the Rock by Terence Martin
"The White Mulberry Tree" As Opera by Mary Jane Humphrey
Gilt Diana and Ivory Christ: Love and Christian Charity in My Mortal
Enemy by John J. Murphy
Her Mortal Enemy's Daughter: Cather and the Writing of Age by Ann Romines
Thefts and Conversation: Cather and Faulkner by Merrill Maguire Skaggs
The Allusive Cather by Marilyn Arnold
"Fire and Wit": Storytelling and the American Artist in Cather's My
Ántonia by Paula Woolley
"Distant and Correct": The Double Life and The Professor's House by Michael Leddy
Spatial Structures and Forms in The Professor's House by Ann Moseley
Time and Memory in Sapphira and the Slave Girl: Sex, Abuse, and
Art by Cynthia Griffin Wolff
Reflections of Authority and Community in Sapphira and the Slave Girl by Sharon Hoover
Cather and the New Canon: "The Old Beauty" and the Issue of Empire by Elizabeth Ammons
Cather's Use of Light: An Impressionistic Tone by Asad Al-Ghalith
Note
Four "New" Cather Letters to Annie Fields at the Huntington Library by Robert Thacker
The Contributors
|