Criticism > Short Story Criticism > American Naturalism in Short Fiction - Warner Berthoff (essay date 1965)
American Naturalism in Short Fiction - Warner Berthoff (essay date 1965)
Warner Berthoff (essay date 1965)
SOURCE: Berthoff, Warner. The Ferment of Realism: American Literature, 1884-1919. New York: The Free Press, 1965.
[In the following excerpt, Berthoff provides a brief overview of Ambrose Bierce's short stories and compares his short fiction to that of Edgar Allan Poe.]
Ambrose Bierce … has maintained a curious kind of underground reputation, less as a maker of books than as a personal legend, a minority saint for the cynical and disenchanted. (A passion for taut, precise, desentimentalizing English is a special part of this legend.) Growing up into the holocaust of the Civil War, in which he served with honor and was badly wounded, he became a writer whose voice and outlook are more impressive than the literary uses he managed to put them to. He survives as a figure of bitter dissent and disaffiliation—from the bluster and prodigality of the Gilded Age, from its daydreams of comfort and success, from...
[The entire page is 696 words long]
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- Introduction
- Representative Works
- Criticism: Overviews And General Studies
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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)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
