Sinopsis de THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE (OXFORD WORLD S CLASSICS)
Oxford offers the most generously annotated edition of The Red Badge of Courage (1895), a vivid psychological account of a young man''s experience fighting in the American Civil War based on Crane''s reading of popular descriptions of battle. This volume also includes the short stories ''The Open Boat''(1898), ''The Monster''(1899), and ''The Blue Hotel''. The editors explore Crane''s work from a fresh critical perspective, focusing on his role as an experimental writer, his modernist legacy, and his social as well as literary revisionism. Like the Carroll volume above, this edition of the seasoned veteran provides a new twist. Crane''s Badge was originally serialized in the New York Press in 1894, a year before the story was published in novel form. This volume offers both the slightly different serial version and the finished work. Though every library no doubt has numerous copies of Red Badge, academic and public libraries supporting American literature curricula should pop for this one, too, especially at the price. Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. Novel of the American Civil War by Stephen Crane, published in 1895 and considered to be his masterwork for its perceptive depiction of warfare and of the psychological turmoil of the soldier. Crane had had no experience of war when he wrote the novel, which he based partly on a popular anthology, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. The Red Badge of Courage has been called the first modern war novel because, uniquely for its time, it tells of the experience of war from the point of view of an ordinary soldier. Henry Fleming is eager to demonstrate his patriotism in a glorious battle, but when the slaughter starts, he is overwhelmed with fear and flees the battlefield. Ironically, he receives his ''red badge of courage'' when he is slightly wounded by being struck on the head by a deserter. He witnesses a friend''s gruesome death and becomes enraged at the injustice of war. The courage of common soldiers and the agonies of death cure him of his romantic notions. He returns to his regiment and continues to fight on with true courage and without illusions. -- The Merriam-Webster Encyclopedia of Literature The Red Badge of Courage has long been considered the first great ‘modern&
Ficha técnica
Editorial: Oxford University Press
ISBN: 9780199552542
Idioma: Inglés
Número de páginas: 320
Tiempo de lectura:
6h 35m
Encuadernación: Tapa blanda
Fecha de lanzamiento: 24/12/2015
Año de edición: 2008
Plaza de edición: Gb
Alto: 19.6 cm
Ancho: 12.9 cm
Peso: 225.0 gr
Especificaciones del producto
Escrito por Stephen Crane
Stephen Crane (Newark, Estados Unidos, 1871 – Badenweiler, Alemania, 1900) publicó su primera novela, Maggie, una chica de la calle, en 1893. Tuvo que autoeditarla y firmarla con un seudónimo porque el tema, los avatares de una joven de baja extracción social que recurre a la prostitución, resultaba demasiado indecoroso para la época. Con tan sólo veintidós años escribió La roja insignia del valor (1895) y la respuesta inmediata de los lectores le granjeó una fama enorme. Más tarde, cubrió la guerra greco-turca como corresponsal en Grecia, y viajó a Cuba para desempeñar la misma labor de periodista de guerra. Pero el barco que había de llevarlo a la isla naufragó y, para salvarse, Crane hubo de remar en un bote hasta la orilla más cercana. De esta experiencia surgió uno de los relatos más importantes que escribió, «El bote abierto». En 1898 el escritor zarpó de nuevo hacia Cuba. Pudo llegar a su destino y allí se ocupó de cubrir el conflicto entre España y los Estados Unidos. Stephen Crane pasó los últimos meses de su vida tratando de combatir todas las deudas que había contraído y murió de tuberculosis en el año 1900.