ABSTRACT

This book is one of the first collections on a neglected field in American literature: that written by and about the working-class. Examining literature from the 1850s to the present, contributors use a wide variety of critical approaches, expanding readers’ understanding of the critical lenses that can be applied to working-class literature. Drawing upon theories of media studies, postcolonial studies, cultural geography, and masculinity studies, the essays consider slave narratives, contemporary poetry and fiction, Depression-era newspaper plays, and ethnic American literature. Depicting the ways that working-class writers render the lives, the volume explores the question of what difference class makes, and how it intersects with gender, race, ethnicity, and geographical location.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part |107 pages

The Realities of Working-Class Life

chapter |18 pages

“Between the Outhouse and the Garbage Dump”

Locating Collapse in Depression Literature

chapter |16 pages

Respectability, Refinement, and the Underclass

Uncle Tom's Cabin and Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl

part |18 pages

Pedagogy and Promises

chapter |16 pages

Bridges, Not Ladders

Working-Class Women Poets on Education, Class Consciousness, and the Promise of Upward Mobility

chapter |19 pages

(Un)teaching the Anthology

Pedagogy Versus Canon in Working-Class Literature

part |51 pages

The Experience of Poverty

chapter |16 pages

Agency, Not Alligators

Poor Women and Outside Assistance in Three Short Stories

chapter |18 pages

Homeless in Seattle

Class Violence in Sherman Alexie's Indian Killer 1

chapter |15 pages

Cultural Geography and Local Economies

The Lesson from Egypt, Maine

part |61 pages

Reconsidering Class, Gender, and Nation

chapter |27 pages

A Body of Work

Imperial Labor and the Writing of American Manhood in London's The Sea-Wolf

chapter |15 pages

“The Man in the Family”

Staging Gender in Waiting for Lefty and American Social Protest Theatre

chapter |17 pages

Henry Roth's Reimagination of Class Consciousness from Call it Sleep to the Mercy of a Rude Stream Novels

Class Consciousness, Nationalist Politics, and Working-Class Studies in the Age of Cosmopolitanism