Criticism > Short Story Criticism > The Open Boat, Stephen Crane - Robert Schulman (essay date November 1978)

The Open Boat, Stephen Crane - Robert Schulman (essay date November 1978)

Robert Schulman (essay date November 1978)

SOURCE: Schulman, Robert. “Community, Perception, and the Development of Stephen Crane: From The Red Badge to ‘The Open Boat’.” American Literature 50, no. 3 (November 1978): 441-60.

[In the following essay, Schulman traces Crane's growing sense of community in his fiction, which culminates in his story “The Open Boat.”]

Sixty years before Crane's “The Open Boat,” Tocqueville described the settlers of the virgin land: “The desire of prosperity has become an ardent and restless passion in their minds, which grows by what it feeds on. They early broke the ties that bound them to their natal earth, and they have contracted no fresh ones on their way.”1 Alienated from the land, Americans also tend to be separated from each other. “Aristocracy,” Tocqueville observed, “had made a chain of all the members of the community, from the peasant to the king;...

[The entire page is 8604 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: