The Oxford Handbook of Jack London

Jay Williams author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:2nd Mar '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Oxford Handbook of Jack London cover

London's first-hand engagement with the world--the process of becoming and maintaining himself as a citizen of the world--helps define the kind of writing he produced. It is insufficient now to call him a naturalist writer if his principal concern was to reflect and represent, not the usual fare of violence and natural forces that we as literary theorists have used to periodize London's work, but rather something larger, more indeterminant, contemporary. The word modern appears often in the pages of this handbook, and though it is not new to call London a modernist, the sheer weight of the scholarship in this present volume that attests to this alternative designation gives it a thorough grounding that previous attempts lacked. London called his times the Machine Age, not just to underscore the rapidity of modern life and its new mechanization, but also to highlight the need for a new social and economic order. The purpose of this handbook is to honor him as a representative American writer of the age as he understood it.

Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. * J. W. Miller, CHOICE *

ISBN: 9780199315178

Dimensions: 178mm x 251mm x 51mm

Weight: 1225g

674 pages