Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Persistence of Place
View through CrossRef
Building on correspondence, essays, and public statements, the second chapter examines the ongoing significance of place to contemporary cycles. Although Winesburg, Ohio did not originate the genre, it has had the most enduring and wide influence on cycles in recent decades, a period which has seen the resurgence of the cycle because community itself is being reimagined in response to the volatility of the economy. This chapter focus on texts whose authors explicitly cite Anderson’s influence: Russell Banks’s Trailerpark (1981), Cathy Day’s The Circus in Winter (2004), and Rebecca Barry’s Later, at the Bar (2007). Anderson hails Winesburg as enabling “a new looseness” in fiction; that sense of novelty and innovation recurs in authors’ statements about reading Winesburg for the first time, citing its transformative and revelatory power. These contemporary writers narrow even within the small town settings to focus on a particular, marginalized population, thereby amplifying the pervasiveness of alienation in contemporary America.
Title: The Persistence of Place
Description:
Building on correspondence, essays, and public statements, the second chapter examines the ongoing significance of place to contemporary cycles.
Although Winesburg, Ohio did not originate the genre, it has had the most enduring and wide influence on cycles in recent decades, a period which has seen the resurgence of the cycle because community itself is being reimagined in response to the volatility of the economy.
This chapter focus on texts whose authors explicitly cite Anderson’s influence: Russell Banks’s Trailerpark (1981), Cathy Day’s The Circus in Winter (2004), and Rebecca Barry’s Later, at the Bar (2007).
Anderson hails Winesburg as enabling “a new looseness” in fiction; that sense of novelty and innovation recurs in authors’ statements about reading Winesburg for the first time, citing its transformative and revelatory power.
These contemporary writers narrow even within the small town settings to focus on a particular, marginalized population, thereby amplifying the pervasiveness of alienation in contemporary America.
Related Results
Visual Ecologies of Placemaking
Visual Ecologies of Placemaking
Contributing to a growing discourse in spatial humanities, this collection of essays provides a unique, critical insight into how place is shaped through visual and sensory practic...
Asian Smallholders in Comparative Perspective
Asian Smallholders in Comparative Perspective
Asian Smallholders in Comparative Perspective provides the first multicountry, inter-disciplinary analysis of the single most important social and economic formation in the Asian c...
Early Colonial Period
Early Colonial Period
An unfortunate conceptual divide within archaeological scholarship has traditionally divided Native history into “before” and “after” European colonialism. Past research emphasized...
Epilogue: The Mixed Legacy of William O. Jenkins
Epilogue: The Mixed Legacy of William O. Jenkins
A short assessment of Jenkins’s legacy and the impact of the state-capital symbioses that his career exemplified. Jenkins had much in common with the richest person in Mexico of to...
Narrating Heritage
Narrating Heritage
Narrating Heritage critically examines the links among heritage, rights and social justice. This book brings important original ethnographic research and unique case studies togeth...
Spatial Residue
Spatial Residue
Spatial Residue: Plastic Affects and Configurations of Placeexplores how places, whether abandoned malls, haunted swamps, or vintage video games, hold residues of history, feeling,...
The Goddess of Place, Place of the Goddess
The Goddess of Place, Place of the Goddess
Chapter 2 investigates the goddess Svasthānī herself. Svasthānī, “the Goddess of One’s Own Place,” serves as a relatively recent and tangible case study for understanding the birth...
Williamsburgh Savings Bank (Hanson Place), first floor interior, consisting of the Hanson Place entrance vestibule; the lobby; the stairway leading to the basement lobby; the stairway leading to the upper floors, and including the first landing; the stair
Williamsburgh Savings Bank (Hanson Place), first floor interior, consisting of the Hanson Place entrance vestibule; the lobby; the stairway leading to the basement lobby; the stairway leading to the upper floors, and including the first landing; the stair
New York (N.Y.). Landmarks Preservation Commission...

