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'A New Home Who'll Follow or Glimpses of Western Life was most famous novel in early nineteenth-century. It is a true story based on the authors's personal experiences in an unsettled village. The protagonist, Mary Clavers, describes mud holes, drunken husbands, local politics, and Victorian values in witty and ironic style. Absorbing!...
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"A New Home is a vivid contribution to a new king of narrative developed during the antebellum period, ethnographic fiction. Kirkland highlights the importance and the drama of local practices and everyday life in Montacute. She traces the way two groups of settlers slowly adjust to each other--the old hands and the newcomers from the East. Dramatizing differences of class and culture, she also shows how the groups finally form a genuine community and a new diverse culture. Kirkland also gives ethnographic fiction an original twist: she satirizes the provincialism and the rigidity of both groups of settlers."--Publisher's description from paperback back cover.
"Enlisting works by Mark Twain and Willa Cather, as well as noncanonical sources, such as private journals, Daehnke examines the manner in which the imagery of the human figure at work and play in the frontier landscape participated in the nationalist, "civilizing" project of westward expansion. While acknowledging the growing secularization of American life, Daehnke surveys the continuing claims of the Christian redemptive scheme as a powerful symbolic domain for these writers' reflections on social progress and the potential for human perfectibility in the landscapes of the West."--Jacket.
"A New Home Who'll Follow or Glimpses of Western Life" was most famous novel in early nineteenth-century. It is a true story based on the authors's personal experiences in an unsettled village. The protagonist, Mary Clavers, describes mud holes, drunken husbands, local politics, and Victorian values in witty and ironic style. Absorbing!