Regionalism and Local Color Fiction
AHTL-2_18_R_p929-990.qxd 10-24-2005 10:02AM Page 971 REGIONALISM AND LOCAL COLOR FICTION Steffens, Lincoln. The Shame of the Cities. New York: Peter common to local color fiction is a degree of narrative Smith, 1901. distance rendered through the character of a narrator Talmage, T. De Witt. Evils of the Cities. Chicago: Rhodes differing in class or place of origin from the region’s and McClure, 1891. residents; a variation on this is a narrative voice dis- Tarbell, Ida. The History of the Standard Oil Company. New tanced through educated diction or an ironic tone. York: McClure, Phillips, 1904. In the late nineteenth century, local color fiction appeared in the great literary journals of the day such Secondary Works as Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, the Century, and Boyer, Paul. Urban Masses and Moral Order in America, 1820–1920. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University the Atlantic Monthly as well as in newspapers and pop- Press, 1992. ular magazines, as Nancy Glazener, Richard Brodhead, and Charles Johanningsmeier have shown. It differed Dombroski, James. The Early Days of Christian Socialism in from mainstream realism in its choice of local or rural America. New York: Octagon Books, 1977. instead of urban subjects and its interest in the customs Kaplan, Amy. The Social Construction of American Realism. of populations otherwise invisible in the literary land- Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988. scape, such as the poor, ethnic minorities, and the eld- May, Henry F. Protestant Churches and Industrial America. erly; moreover, unlike mainstream realism, the market New York: Harper, 1949. for local color encouraged writers who might other- Pizer, Donald, ed.
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