Abstract

Frank Norris’ Literary TerminologyA Note On Historical Context John E. McCluskey John E. McCluskey The University of Tennessee at Martin Footnotes 1. Robert E. Spiller, “Toward Naturalism in Fiction,” on the Literary History of the United States, ed. Robert E. Spiller et al. (New York, 1948), pp. 1026–27. 2. H. Rider Haggard, “About Fiction,” Contemporary Review, LI (February, 1887), 175–76. 3. Albion Tourgée, “The Claim of ‘Realism,’” North American Review, CXLVIII (March, 1889), 386. 4. Hamlin Garland, “Sanity in Fiction,” North American Review, CLXXVI (March, 1903), 340. 5. Frank Norris, “A Plea for Romantic Fiction,” Boston Evening Transcript (December, 1901), 14 5. Frank Norris, “A Plea for Romantic Fiction,” Boston Evening Transcript (December, 1901), 14 6. Frank Norris, “Zola As a Romantic Writer,” San Francisco Wave (June 27, 1896), 3 7. “The Novel of Misery,” Quarterly Review, CXCVI (October, 1902), 392. 8. Max Nordau, Degeneration (New York, 1905), p. 492. 9. George Moore, Impressions and Opinions (New York, 1891), pp. 123–29. 10. William Dean Howells, “Emile Zola,” North American Review, CLXXV (November, 1902), 588. 11. “Mr. Howells on Some Modern Novelists,” Critic, XI (July 16, 1897), 32. The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, IV (Washington, 1911), pp. 236–48 13. The Literary Criticism of Frank Norris, p. 76. Maurice Thompson, “The Romance and the Novel,” Chautauquan, XVI (October, 1892), 43 Copyright © 1972 Western Literature Association

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