Willa Cather and the American Southwest
John N Swift author Joseph R Urgo editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Nebraska Press
Published:1st Jun '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The American Southwest was arguably as formative a landscape for Willa Cather’s aesthetic vision as was her beloved Nebraska. Both landscapes elicited in her a sense of raw incompleteness. They seemed not so much finished places as things unassembled, more like countries “still waiting to be made into [a] landscape.” Cather’s fascination with the Southwest led to its presence as a significant setting in three of her most ambitious novels: The Song of the Lark, The Professor’s House, and Death Comes for the Archbishop. This volume focuses a sharp eye on how the landscape of the American Southwest served Cather creatively and the ways it shaped her research and productivity. No single scholarly methodology prevails in the essays gathered here, giving the volume rare depth and complexity.
“The essays in this engaging volume take on the wide geographical and cultural landscape of the two 1920s novels [The Professor’s House and Death Comes for the Archbishop] . . . . German anthropology, New Mexican folk art, Anasazi cannibalism, the Smithsonian Museum, and ‘sentimental nationality’ are just a few of the areas explored by the intrepid contributors.”—Choice
"[The collection] is serious, scholarly, and commedably broad within the narrow confines of single-author studies."—Jennifer Jenkins, The Journal of Arizona History
ISBN: 9780803245570
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 431g
180 pages