Criticism > Short Story Criticism > American Naturalism in Short Fiction - James Trammel Cox (essay date summer 1957)
American Naturalism in Short Fiction - James Trammel Cox (essay date summer 1957)
James Trammel Cox (essay date summer 1957)
SOURCE: Cox, James Trammel. “Stephen Crane as Symbolic Naturalist: An Analysis of ‘The Blue Hotel’.” Modern Fiction Studies 3, no. 2 (summer 1957): 147-58.
[In the following essay, Cox offers an analysis of “The Blue Hotel” to illustrate his thesis that Stephen Crane is more of a symbolist than a naturalist.]
The limitations of labels are less apparent when the term, like naturalism, has clearly definable boundaries than when it suffers from an excess of meaning, as in the much discussed omnibus romanticism. But they are no less real, and no less critically inhibiting. In the case of naturalism I would say this is particularly true, and as it has been applied to the fiction of Stephen Crane the effect has been to encourage a view and a lethargy which Crane hardly deserves. R. W. Stallman is almost alone in perceiving a fundamental difference in the fictional...
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Criticism: Major Authors Of American Literary Naturalism
- Warner Berthoff (essay date 1965)
- Stephen Crane
- James Trammel Cox (essay date summer 1957)
- George Monteiro (essay date spring 1971)
- Sydney J. Krause (essay date autumn 1983)
- John J. Conder (essay date 1984)
- Theodore Dreiser
- Yoshinobu Hakutani (essay date 1980)
- Irene Gammel (essay date 1994)
- Jack London
- Earl J. Wilcox (essay date 1983)
- Jeanne Campbell Reesman (essay date winter 1997)
- Frank Norris
- Barbara Hochman (essay date 1988)
- Edith Wharton
- Donna M. Campbell (essay date autumn 1994)
- Scott Emmert (essay date autumn 2002)
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