Beyond Boundaries
374 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
4 B&W figures
Paperback
Release Date:15 Sep 2016
ISBN:9780817358600
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Beyond Boundaries

Rereading John Steinbeck

University of Alabama Press
The result of a worldwide effort to assess both the current state of critical understanding of John Steinbeck’s works and the extent of his cultural influence

As a writer who, beginning in the 1930s, illuminated the lives of ordinary people, Steinbeck came to be the conscience of America. He witnessed and recorded with clarity much of the political and social upheaval of the 20th century: The Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War, and Vietnam. Yet his place in the literary canon of American literature has been much debated and often dismissed by academics. Beyond Boundaries argues persuasively for Steinbeck's relevance, offering a fuller, more nuanced and international appreciation of the popular Nobel laureate and his works.

Topics treated in these wide-ranging essays include the historical and literary contexts and the artistic influence of the eminent novelist; the reception and translation of Steinbeck works outside the United States; Steinbeck’s worldview, his social vision, and his treatment of poverty, of self, and of patriotism; influence on Native American writers; the centrality of the archetypal feminine throughout his fiction; and the author's lifelong interest in science and philosophy.
 
International in scope, this timely study reevaluates the enduring and evolving legacy of one of America's most significant writers.
 
[Beyond Boundaries] deserves the highest praise and is a must read for anyone interested in Steinbeck studies or modern American Literature.’
The Steinbeck Review
This book takes Steinbeck criticism beyond the frozen boundaries of the past and pushes out over boundaries in many different directions. It shows Steinbeck as an explorer of form and a far more profound thinker than he has been credited to be. It refutes the clichés of criticism and takes us into new territory.’
—Jackson J. Benson, San Diego State University
 
Susan Shillinglaw is Professor of English and Director of the Center for Steinbeck Studies at San Jose State University and has coedited Steinbeck and the Enviroment: Interdisciplinary Approaches.
 
Kevin Hearle is a Lecturer in English at Notre Dame de Namur University in Belmont, California, and with Peter Lisca edited “The Grapes of Wrath”: Text and Criticism.
 
Contents

Acknowledgments ix
 
Introduction: Rereading John Steinbeck
Susan Shillinglaw and Kevin Hearle  1

I. Beyond Boundaries

1. Come Back to the Boxcar, Leslie Honey: Or, Don’t Cry For Me, Madonna, Just Pass the Milk: Steinbeck and Sentimentality
John Seelye  11

2. The Ghost of Tom Joad:  Steinbeck’s Legacy in the Songs of Bruce Springsteen
Gavin Cologne-Brookes  34

3. Changing Perceptions of Homelessness: John Steinbeck, Carey McWilliams, and California during the 1930s
Christina Sheehan Gold  47

4. Steinbeck’s “Self-characters” as 1930s Underdogs
Warren G. French  66

5. Propaganda and Persuasion in John Steinbeck’s The Moon Is Down
Rodney P. Rice  77

6. Steinbeck’s Influence upon Native American Writers
Paul and Charlotte Hadella  87

II. Steinbeck as World Citizen

7. Cannery Row and the Japanese Mentality
Hiroshi Kaname  101

8. “Consonant Symphonies”: John Steinbeck in the Indus Valley
P. Balaswamy 107

9. Living In(tension)ally: Steinbeck’s The Log from the Sea of Cortez as a Reflection of the Balance Advocated in Lao Tze’s Tao Teh Ching
Michael J. Meyer 117

10. Recent Steinbeck Dramatic Adaptations in Japan
Hiromasa Takamura 130

11. Staging Tortilla Flat: Steinbeck in a Thai Context
Malithat Promathatavedi 140

12. Novella into Play: Burning Bright
Kiyoshi Nakayama 151

13. Beyond France: Steinbeck’s The Short Reign of Pippin IV
Christine Rucklin 162

14. “The Capacity for Peace—The Culmination of All the Others”: The Internationalism of John Steinbeck and Narrational Technique
John Ditsky 171

III. Rereading Steinbeck’s Women

15. Beyond the Boundaries of Sexism: The Archetypal Feminine versus Anima Women in Steinbeck’s Novels
Lorelei Cederstrom 189

16. Of Mice and Men: Creating and Re-creating Curley’s Wife
Mimi Reisel Gladstein 205

17. Beyond Evil: Cathy and Cal in East of Eden
Carol L. Hansen 221

18. Cathy in East of Eden: Indispensable to the Thematic Design
Kyoko Ariki 230

IV. Steinbeck’s Science and Ethics

19. These Are American People: The Spectre of Eugenics in Their Blood Is Strong and The Grapes of Wrath
Kevin Hearle 243

20. The Global Appeal of Steinbeck’s Science: The Animal-Human Connections
James C. Kelley 255

21. The Philosophical Mind of John Steinbeck: Virtue Ethics and His Later Fiction
Stephen K. George 266

22. Dreams of an Elegant Universe on Cannery Row
Brian Railsback 277

23. The Place We Have Arrived: On Writing/Reading toward Cannery Row
Robert DeMott 295

Notes 315

Bibliography 327

Contributors 345

Index 353
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