01691nam a2200349 a 4500001001400000003000800014005001700022006001900039007001500058008004100073020003800114040002100152050002400173082001800197100003400215245010800249260005800357300002300415504004100438520031100479588009400790650002700884650005900911650005900970650002901029650003601058650003501094650003401129651005401163776003301217856009101250EDZ0000084697StDuBDS20170830091355.0m||||||||d||||||||cr||||||||||||120515s2012 nyu fo| 000 0 eng|d a9780199933334 (ebook) :cNo price aStDuBDScStDuBDS 0aPS374.R37bL39 201204a813.309122231 aLawson, Andrew,d1959 July 4-10aDownwardly mobile : the changing fortunes of American realism /h[electronic resource] cAndrew Lawson. aNew York ;aOxford :bOxford University Press,c2012. a1 online resource. aIncludes bibliographical references.8 aThis title explores the links between a growing sense of economic precariousness within the American middle class and the development of literary realism over the course of the nineteenth century, as it examines works by Rebecca Harding Davis, William Dean Howells, Henry James, Hamlin Garland, and others. aDescription based on online resource; title from PDF title page (viewed on May 15, 2012). 0aRealism in literature. 0aAmerican fictiony19th centuryxHistory and criticism. 0aAmerican fictiony20th centuryxHistory and criticism. 0aEconomics in literature. 0aFinancial crises in literature. 0aSocial mobility in literature. 0aSocial classes in literature. 0aUnited StatesxEconomic conditionsy19th century.08iPrint versionz9780199828050403Oxford scholarship onlineuhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199828050.001.0001