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American Fiction in the Cold War
University of Wisconsin Press, 1991 Paper: 978-0-299-12844-9 Library of Congress Classification PS374.P6S3 1991 Dewey Decimal Classification 813.5409358
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ABOUT THIS BOOK
In American Fiction in the Cold War Thomas Hill Schaub makes it clear that Trilling’s summary was in itself a mythic reconstruction, a prominent example of the way liberal writers in the late 1940s and 1950s came to terms with their political past. Schaub’s book brilliantly analyzes their efforts to reshape an “old” liberalism alleged to hold naively optimistic views of human nature, scientific reason, and social progress into a “new,” skeptical liberalism that recognized the persistence of human evil, the fragility of reason, and the ambiguity of moral decision. See other books on: American fiction | Cold War | Cold War in literature | Liberalism in literature | Political fiction, American See other titles from University of Wisconsin Press |
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