Sonstiges: |
- Nachgewiesen in: hbz-Verbundkatalog
- Sprachen: English
- Original Material: hbk. : £130.00
- Contents Note: Introduction; SECTION 1: PRODUCTION; 1. How the Communist Party Shaped Gwendolyn Brooks's Early Writing: Mary Helen Washington; 2. The Cold War Encyclopedic Novel: Jeffrey Severs, University of British Columbia (Canada); 3. Cold War Technology and Women Poets: Linda Kinnahan, Duquesne University (USA); 4. The American Long Poem Evolves, 1945-1990: Ed Brunner, Southern Illinois University (USA); 5. Butler, Le Guin, and Feminist Science Fiction of the Cold War: Katlyn Williams, University of Iowa (USA) ; 6. Cold War Spy Fiction: Skip Willman, University of South Dakota ; 7. American Jewish Writers and the Eastern Bloc: Brian Goodman, Arizona State University (USA); 8. Writing the Cold War in the American Academic Novel: Ian Butcher, Fanshawe University (Canada); SECTION II: CIRCULATION; 9. Anglo-American Propaganda and the Transition from the Second World War to the Cultural Cold War: James Smith and Guy Woodward, Durham University (UK); 10. ; Book Diplomacy: Rosa Magnusdottir and Birgitte Beck Pristed, Aarhus University (Denmark) ; 11. Closets, Pulps, and the Gay Internationale: Jaime Harker, University of Mississippi (USA); 12. Librarians, Library Diplomacy, and the Cultural Cold War, 1950-1970: Amanda Laugesen, Australian National University (Australia); 13. The Transcription Centre and the Co-Production of African Literary Culture in the 1960s: Asha Rogers, University of Birmingham (UK); 14. Creative Writing and the Cold War: Eric Bennett, Providence College (USA); 15. How Chinese Letters Traveled to Iowa City: P Yi-hung Liu, Academia Sinica (Taiwan); 16. William Faulkner as Cold War Cultural Ambassador: Deborah Cohn, Indiana University (USA); SECTION III: RECEPTION; 17. The Distribution and Reception of American Literature in Cold War Japan: Hiromi Ochi, Senshu University, Tokyo (Japan); 18. Making a Literary Working Class in the Cultural Cold War: Nicole Moore, University of New South Wales (Australia); 19. ; Anti-Apartheid Imagination, the Cold War-era, and African Literary Magazines: Christopher Ouma, University of Cape Town (South Africa) ; 20. Cuban Revolutionaries Read U.S. Writers: Russell Cobb, University of Alberta (Canada); 21. "Cultural Freedom" in Cold War India: Laetitia Zecchini, CNRS Paris (France); 22. Robinson Jeffers's Journey behind the Iron Curtain: Jirina Smejkalova, Charles University, Prague (Czech Republic); 23. Reading for Freedom in Cold War America: Kristin Matthews, Brigham Young University (USA)
- Document Type: Monograph
- File Description: Text
- Language: English
|