New York: Its Upper Ten and Lower Million
Author : George Lippard
Publisher :
Page : 304 pages
File Size : 46,75 MB
Release : 1854
Category : City and town life
ISBN :
Author : George Lippard
Publisher :
Page : 304 pages
File Size : 46,75 MB
Release : 1854
Category : City and town life
ISBN :
Author : George Lippard
Publisher : Good Press
Page : 533 pages
File Size : 22,95 MB
Release : 2019-11-29
Category : Fiction
ISBN :
This novel is a melodramatic tale of greed, corruption, and scandal in New York City in the early 19th century. The story follows the wealthy Van Huyden family, particularly Gulian Van Huyden and his wife Joanna, and their tumultuous relationships with each other and with various characters from the city's upper and lower classes. The novel explores themes such as social inequality, political corruption, prostitution, drug addiction, and murder, and it offers a vivid portrait of the city's diverse and often dark underbelly.
Author : Eliza Ann Dupuy
Publisher :
Page : 124 pages
File Size : 17,48 MB
Release : 1854
Category :
ISBN :
Author : James Morgart
Publisher : University of Wales Press
Page : 246 pages
File Size : 30,73 MB
Release : 2022-05-15
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1786838788
The study highlights several writers who have not received much, if any, attention among Gothic scholars. This allows readers exposure to writers they may have never encountered before or may realize dimensions to the authors’ works they have never considered. The study reconsiders scholarship’s understanding of post-war American literature. This gives readers, students, and scholars a new approach to discussing post-war fiction that is not delimited to widely accepted understanding of how Cold War anxieties were manifested in fiction. The study contextualizes the fiction it examines within each work’s respective region. This allows readers a new way of approaching not just post-war Gothic fiction but Gothic fiction in general.
Author : Dale Cockrell
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Page : 326 pages
File Size : 45,55 MB
Release : 2019-08-13
Category : Music
ISBN : 0393608956
"Racy scholarship does the Grizzly Bear here with theoretical rigor." —William Lhamon, author of Raising Cain Everybody’s Doin’ It is the eye-opening story of popular music’s seventy-year rise in the brothels, dance halls, and dives of New York City. It traces the birth of popular music, including ragtime and jazz, to convivial meeting places for sex, drink, music, and dance. Whether coming from a single piano player or a small band, live music was a nightly feature in New York’s spirited dives, where men and women, often black and white, mingled freely—to the horror of the elite. This rollicking demimonde drove the development of an energetic dance music that would soon span the world. The Virginia Minstrels, Juba, Stephen Foster, Irving Berlin and his hit “Alexander’s Ragtime Band,” and the Original Dixieland Jass Band all played a part in popularizing startling new sounds. Musicologist Dale Cockrell recreates this ephemeral underground world by mining tabloids, newspapers, court records of police busts, lurid exposés, journals, and the reports of undercover detectives working for social-reform organizations, who were sent in to gather evidence against such low-life places. Everybody’s Doin’ It illuminates the how, why, and where of America’s popular music and its buoyant journey from the dangerous Five Points of downtown to the interracial black and tans of Harlem.
Author : Kenneth A. Scherzer
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 388 pages
File Size : 41,28 MB
Release : 2014-12-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0822398753
Stick ball, stoop sitting, pickle barrel colloquys: The neighborhood occupies a warm place in our cultural memory—a place that Kenneth A. Scherzer contends may have more to do with ideology and nostalgia than with historical accuracy. In this remarkably detailed analysis of neighborhood life in New York City between 1830 and 1875, Scherzer gives the neighborhood its due as a complex, richly textured social phenomenon and helps to clarify its role in the evolution of cities. After a critical examination of recent historical renderings of neighborhood life, Scherzer focuses on the ecological, symbolic, and social aspects of nineteenth-century community life in New York City. Employing a wide array of sources, from census reports and church records to police blotters and brothel guides, he documents the complex composition of neighborhoods that defy simple categorization by class or ethnicity. From his account, the New York City neighborhood emerges as a community in flux, born out of the chaos of May Day, the traditional moving day. The fluid geography and heterogeneity of these neighborhoods kept most city residents from developing strong local attachments. Scherzer shows how such weak spatial consciousness, along with the fast pace of residential change, diminished the community function of the neighborhood. New Yorkers, he suggests, relied instead upon the "unbounded community," a collection of friends and social relations that extended throughout the city. With pointed argument and weighty evidence, The Unbounded Community replaces the neighborhood of nostalgia with a broader, multifaceted conception of community life. Depicting the neighborhood in its full scope and diversity, the book will enhance future forays into urban history.
Author : Thomas Heise
Publisher : Rutgers University Press
Page : 306 pages
File Size : 32,51 MB
Release : 2010-11-16
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0813549817
Urban Underworlds is an exploration of city spaces, pathologized identities, lurid fears, and American literature. Surveying the 1890s to the 1990s, Thomas Heise chronicles how and why marginalized populations immigrant Americans in the Lower East Side, gays and lesbians in Greenwich Village and downtown Los Angeles, the black underclass in Harlem and Chicago, and the new urban poor dispersed across American cities have been selectively targeted as "urban underworlds" and their neighborhoods characterized as miasmas of disease and moral ruin. The quarantining of minority cultures helped to promote white, middle-class privilege. Following a diverse array of literary figures who differ with the assessment of the underworld as the space of the monstrous Other, Heise contends that it is a place where besieged and neglected communities are actively trying to take possession of their own neighborhoods.
Author : John Bryant
Publisher : Kent State University Press
Page : 452 pages
File Size : 47,53 MB
Release : 1997
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 9780873385626
This collection of analytical essays is the result of several conferences throughout 1991, the centennary of Herman Melville's death. They survey the past and present of Melville Studies and suggest directions for the future.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 784 pages
File Size : 31,42 MB
Release : 1869
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Library of Congress
Publisher :
Page : 784 pages
File Size : 48,43 MB
Release : 1869
Category : Subject catalogs
ISBN :