Chapter I this line indicates that there is no help from God


Best remembered for his Civil War narrative


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Best remembered for his Civil War narrative.

Crane's most important contribution to American literature is his examination of the nature of braveness in the novel The Red Badge of Courage, the story of Henry Fleming, a young man who enlists to battle in the Civil War. Through his experiences, Fleming eventually discovers that he possesses braveness however that hostilities is less glamorous and some distance more brutal than he imagined it would be. With this narrative, Crane takes the characteristics of Naturalism and applies them to a crucial duration in American history. The result is a work that was once right away embraced by way of Americans at the time of e-book and endured to be admired and taught into the twenty-first century.

Theodore Dreiser (1871-1945)

Born in Terre Haute, Indiana, on August 27, 1871, Theodore Dreiser loved a successful career as a journalist and novelist. Dreiser left Indiana as a younger man and discovered work in Chicago as a journalist. When his first novel, Sister Carrie, used to be a failure, he was plagued via self-doubt. But this preliminary disappointment proved to be unfounded, as he rose to prominence in literary circles, was a finalist for the Nobel Prize for literature in 1930, and acquired an Award of Merit from the Academy of Arts and Letters in 1945. Dreiser died of a coronary heart assault in Los Angeles, California, on December 28, 1945.

In An American Tragedy and Sister Carrie, Dreiser depicts the darkish side of the myth of the American dream, a ordinary theme in his work. Both novels feature tragic characters who are the victims of their own desires. In any discussion of Naturalism, An American Tragedy is usually held up as the best example. But Sister Carrie also illustrates the movement.

Jack London (1876-1916)

Jack London was born on January 12, 1876, in San Francisco, California, and raised with the aid of his mom on my own after they have been abandoned through his father. London educated himself with the aid of analyzing at public libraries. As a young man, he worked as asailor, punctuated through periods of homelessness and joblessness. In 1896, he quickly attended the University of California but was unable to end due to the fact of a lack of money. In 1897, he took phase in the Klondike gold rush in northern Canada,an journey that fueled his writing even though malnourishment affected his health. He again to Oakland, California, the following year and started to seriously pursue a profession in writing. Advances in printing technology made magazines more cost-effective to produce and resulted in a growth market for brief fiction. Within two years, London was once incomes a more than decent earnings as a writer. His second novel, The Call of the Wild, used to be published and widely advertised with the aid of Macmillan in 1903, propelling London to literary fame. London was once dogged by way of claims of plagiarism, stemming from his use of newspaper articles as idea and resource for his stories. He died November 22, 1916, at his domestic in Glen Ellen, California, from problems stemming from kidney failure. Some consider he may also have overdosed—on reason or by way of accident—on the morphine he was taking to control his pain.




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