A History of American Literature
Making It New: 1900–1945 467 The story speaks for many immigrants of the time, who wanted to play their part in the creation of ...
468 Making It New: 1900–1945 two worlds and in captivity to his job, it was greeted with acclaim. Success rendered Di Donato sil ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 469 immigration was mainly to California, where Chinese immigrants joined the “Forty- Niners” during th ...
470 Making It New: 1900–1945 find it difficult to reconcile them with her attempts, and her need, to assimilate into American so ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 471 then, while he was teaching at New York University, he became friends with Thomas Wolfe. Wolfe read ...
472 Making It New: 1900–1945 part three documents Carlos’s transformation into a radicalized union activist, working for the Fil ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 473 (1936) by D’Arcy McNickle, being shackled and taken away by white law officers concludes the novel ...
474 Making It New: 1900–1945 interwoven with the histories of the Cree, Metis, and Salish (Flathead) tribes. After his parents w ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 475 at the University of Oklahoma, he is then involved in the early days of aviation. But, after World ...
476 Making It New: 1900–1945 verification of the details Coyote Stories contained about Okanogan beliefs, since they did not reg ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 477 seen as promoters of the new movement in black cultural self-consciousness. Notably, Jessie Fauset ...
478 Making It New: 1900–1945 more wholesome growth in the future, it may on the contrary truly democratize.” But, on the whole, ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 479 (1893–1955), the author of an authoritative study of lynching, Rope and Faggot: The Biography of Ju ...
480 Making It New: 1900–1945 him. And he abandons himself to “pure voluptuous jazzing”: a life of dancing and sex, gambling and ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 481 of the South. In 1927, reversing the tide of the Great Migration, she returned to the South, with t ...
482 Making It New: 1900–1945 maneuverings of speech and ceremony. She discloses how one remarkable woman fulfills the promise of ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 483 first African-American women to win a Guggenheim Fellowship for literature, which enabled her to sp ...
484 Making It New: 1900–1945 African - American women who could pass for white. One of them, Clare Kendry, does so and is marrie ...
Making It New: 1900–1945 485 an Indian or a dark-skinned European, Toomer spent his childhood in his birthplace of Washington, D ...
486 Making It New: 1900–1945 who rationalize their physical desires into idealized abstractions or cower in drink, daydreaming, ...
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