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IV.3.Regionalism and Local Colorism

IV.3.Regionalism and Local Colorism. Focus of Study Regionalism Background: Definition Local Colorism Definition Background Basic Features. Regionalism. Background 1.The shift of the publishing center from Boston to New York--a greater openness to authors from all parts of America.

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IV.3.Regionalism and Local Colorism

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  1. IV.3.Regionalism and Local Colorism • Focus of Study • Regionalism • Background: • Definition • Local Colorism • Definition • Background • Basic Features

  2. Regionalism • Background 1.The shift of the publishing center from Boston to New York--a greater openness to authors from all parts of America. 2.The growth of communication and transportation after the Civil War. 3. The rapid growth of local magazines.

  3. Definition • It stresses fidelity to a particular geographical section and a faithful representation of its habits, speech, manners, history, folklore, or beliefs. • It focuses on characters, dialect, customs, topography, and other features particular to a specific region. • Its weaknesses may include nostalgia or sentimentality

  4. Characteristics • Setting: are frequently remote and inaccessible. • Characters: are marked by their adherence to the old ways, by dialect, and by particular personality traits central to the region. • Narrator: is typically an educated observer from the world beyond who learns something from the characters.

  5. Plots: • Stories may include lots of storytelling and revolve around the community and its rituals. • Themes: • Many local color stories share an antipathy to change and a certain degree of nostalgia for an always-past golden age.

  6. Local color fiction Definitions: • It exploits the speech, dress, mannerisms, habits of thought, and topography peculiar to a certain region. • Hamlin Garland defined it as having "such quality of texture and background that it could not have been written in any other place or by anyone else than a native."

  7. Background • People realized the marked differences in different parts of the country and tried to assert their unique identity and seek understanding and recognition by showing their local character. • The frontier humorists who had been popular with their "tall tales" before the Civil War paved the way for local color fiction.

  8. Basic Features 1. Local color fiction presents a locale which is distinguished from the outside world. 2. It describes the exotic and the picturesque. 3. It glorifies the past. 4. It also attempts to show things as they are. 5. It stresses the influence of setting on character.

  9. Significance • Local color fiction convinced people that the common life of the common people in the backwoods and on the frontiers of American society was worthy of serious literary treatment. • This literary movement contributed to the reunification of the country after the Civil War and to the building of national identity toward the end of the nineteenth century. • It contributed to the narrative of unified nationhood that late nineteenth-century America sought to construct.

  10. Study Questions • 1. What is basic features of Regionalism? • 2. What is basic features of Local Colorism? • 3. Can you make a distinction between Local Colorism and Regionalism? • 4. Please give the historical background of the rise of Local Color Fiction in American literature.

  11. References • Glazener, Nancy. Reading for Realism. Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1997. • Bartholow V. Crawford et al., American literature. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc.. 1980. • Dareel Abel, American literature. New York: Barron’s Educational Series, Inc.,1963. • George McMichael et al., ed. Anthology of American Literature. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., 1980.

  12. Thank You Very Much for Attending This Lecture

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