Never been rich [electronic resource] : the life and work of a southern ruralist writer, Harry Harrison Kroll / Richard L. Saunders.
2011
PS3521.R566 Z88 2011eb
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Title
Never been rich [electronic resource] : the life and work of a southern ruralist writer, Harry Harrison Kroll / Richard L. Saunders.
Author
Edition
1st ed.
ISBN
9781572338388 (electronic bk.)
1572338253
9781572338258
1572338253
9781572338258
Publication Details
Knoxville : University of Tennessee Press, c2011.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xvi, 246 p.)
Call Number
PS3521.R566 Z88 2011eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
813/.54 B
Summary
Known for his sometimes-gritty naturalism and use of Appalachian dialect, Harry Harrison Kroll (1888-1967) was a remarkably prolific Tennessee novelist and short-story writer during the middle decades of the twentieth century. His career spanned two of the three major shifts in publishing during the twentieth century: the heyday and decline of the fiction magazine market during the late 1920s, and the rise of nonfiction and solidification of paperback marketing during the 1950s. Never Been Rich explores details of Kroll's humble, rural youth, his long delayed education and the development of his craft, before discussing his lengthy career and how it reflected changes in both public taste and the American publishing industry. Kroll focused on writing not as a high art, but instead on what was popular-what would earn him a living. He preferred to write voluminously rather than exquisitely, and growing up in the rural south provided him with a broad and fertile field of experience to plow for his crop of stories. As a writing instructor, he had a profound influence on his students, particularly the well-known Appalachian triumvirate of James Still, Jesse Stuart, and Don West. While Kroll may lack grand literary significance, Richard Saunders maintains that we should explore not merely the linguistic and thematic aspects of a writer's work but also its broad economic and social contexts, including the idea that literature is both an art form and a marketable product in an extensive industry. His study of Kroll delves deeply into those contexts and shows that, while Kroll did not strive for a place among writers of high literature, he exemplifies the far more widely read popular literature of his times.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Table of Contents
A poor-man's boy, 1888-1920
More than one kind of education, 1921-1935
College professor, American novelist, 1936-1957
Professor emeritus, 1958-1967
Harry Kroll as litterateur: lessons.
More than one kind of education, 1921-1935
College professor, American novelist, 1936-1957
Professor emeritus, 1958-1967
Harry Kroll as litterateur: lessons.