Criticism > Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism > Huneker, James Gibbons - H. L. Mencken (essay date 1917)
Huneker, James Gibbons - H. L. Mencken (essay date 1917)
H. L. Mencken (essay date 1917)
SOURCE: "James Huneker," in A Book of Prefaces, Alfred A. Knopf, 1917, pp. 151-94.
[Mencken was one of the most influential figures in American literature from the First World War until the early years of the Great Depression. His strongly individualistic, irreverent outlook on life and his vigorous, invective-charged writing style helped establish the iconoclastic spirit of the Jazz Age and significantly shaped the direction of American literature. In the following essay, Mencken praises Huneker's enthusiasm for the arts as well as his exuberant essays on authors and composers.]
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Edgar Allan Poe, I am fond of believing, earned as a critic a good deal of the excess of praise that he gets as a romancer and a poet, and another over-estimated American dithyrambist, Sidney Lanier, wrote the best textbook of prosody in English [The Science of English Verse]; but in general the critical writing...
[The entire page is 9767 words long]
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Criticism
- Edward Clark Marsh (essay date 1909)
- Current Literature (essay date 1909)
- Wilkinson Sherren (essay date 1916)
- H. L. Mencken (essay date 1917)
- Joseph I. C. Clarke (essay date 1921)
- Lawrence Gilman (essay date 1921)
- George E. De Mille (essay date 1927)
- Granville Hicks (essay date 1929)
- Van Wyck Brooks (essay date 1932)
- Eliot G. Fay (essay date 1940)
- Oscar Cargill (excerpt date 1941)
- Charles I. Glicksberg (essay date 1951)
- Arnold T. Schwab (essay date 1957)
- Annette T. Rottenberg (essay date 1965)
- Mortimer H. Frank (essay date 1973)
- Arno Karlen (essay date 1981)
- Paul E. Cohen (essay date 1982)
- Samuel Lipman (essay date 1987)
- Further Reading
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