Perceptions of the Landscape in Twentieth Century American Literature: Landscapes from Four American Regional Writers (Wallace Stegner, Ivan Doig, Jack Kerouac, and Wendell Berry) |
Contents
Chapter IWallace Stegners Wolf Willow | 8 |
Chapter IIAngle of Repose | 28 |
Chapter IIIIvan Doigs Autobiographical Fiction | 67 |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adult adventure Alex Alex's American Angle of Repose artistic associations Berry's world Bluebird Sings Burley California chapter character childhood connection contemporary context contrast cultural Doig's Donald Worster draw dream effect elements English Creek essay Etulain experience farming fascination father fiction frontier Gary Snyder grandmother's Gros Ventre home place Ibid individual isolation Ivan Doig Jack Kerouac Jick McCaskill's Jick's Kentucky Kerouac lack land Leadville Lemonade Springs literary literature lives Long-Legged House Lyman Lyman Ward Mariah Montana marriage McCaig McCaskill family Medicine region ment Montana mountains Nathan Coulter natural world neighbors North Point Press observation Oliver Oliver's passage personal history Place on Earth Plains Port William potential regional writers responsibilities Road role romantic Sal's San Francisco scene sense shared story surroundings Susan tion town understanding urban values vision Wallace Stegner Ward Wendell Berry West Western landscape Whitemud wild Wolf Willow Worster Writer and Region York



