Edgar Allan Poe and his nineteenth-century American counterparts /

Gruesser, John Cullen, 1959-

Edgar Allan Poe and his nineteenth-century American counterparts / John Cullen Gruesser. - 173 pages ; 24 cm

Includes index. GBP 80/-

Introduction. Dreams and mystifications of Poe -- Poor Edgar's almanac : E. A. Poe's money woes -- Outside looking in : Poe and New York City -- Eddy P., the scrivener : biography and autobiography in Herman Melville's "Story of wall-street" -- Character rivalry, authorial sleight-of-hand, and generic fluidity in the Dupin trilogy -- Varieties of detection in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The scarlet letter, Walt Whitman's Life and adventures of Jack Engle, Herman Melville's Benito Cereno, and Mark Twain's "The stolen white elephant" -- Madness, mystification, and "average racism" in "The gold-bug," E.D.E.N. Southworth's The hidden hand, Harriet Jacobs's Incidents in the life of a slave girl, and Pauline Hopkins's Hagar's daughter -- Coda. "A crime of dark dye" : misreading Poe's criticism.

"Situates Poe within, and reads his texts in relation to, the economic, literary, and racial milieu of the antebellum United States"--

9781501334528 (hardcover)


Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809-1849 --Criticism and interpretation.


American literature--History and criticism.--19th century

818.309 GRU

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