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Tuesday, May 28, 2019

The Red Badge :: essays research papers

The Red Badge of CourageThe Red Badge of Courage is now universally recognized as a masterpiece, although when it beginning(a) appeared in book form in 1896 (two months later in England than in the United States) it provoked mixed reactions. The English critics, in fact, brought it to the attention of the American public, which had for the most part ignored it. Those early readers who approved saw in it a "true and complete picture of war," a book which "thrusts aside romantic machinery" in party favour of dramatic action and photographic revelation. Its critics attacked it for what they considered its utter lack of literary form - its "absurd similes," "bad grammar," and "violent straining after effect." Edward Garnett, however, praised its "perfect mastery of form," and Conrad, who had cognize Crane, said in 1926 that The Red Badge of Courage was a "spontaneous piece of work which seems to spurt and flow uniform a tapped str eam from the depths of the writers being," and he found it "virile and full of gentle sympathy" while it was happily marred by no "declamatory sentiments." Throughout the first four decades of the one C the book was variously praised and condemned for its naturalism or "animalism," its realism and its extraordinary style. V. S. Pritchett, writing in 1946, may be said to represent the prevailing opinion when he declares that Cranes "verisimilitude," his grasp of "human feelings," and his "dramatic scenes and portraits" give The Red Badge of Courage a place in the literature of war.     It is only in the forties that expert literary analysis of the book begins. It had of course long been recognized that novels such as Zolas La Debacle and Tolstoys Sevastopol and War and Peace had had some influence on Crane, and that he had made use of Battles and Leaders of the Civil War (which had first appeared serially in th e Century Magazine) as well as accounts of particular campaigns his companion William, for one thing, was an expert on the strategy of the Battle of Chancellorsville, and there are many parallels with this battle to be found in The Red Badge. But scholars like Pratt, Webster, Osborn, and Stallman began to call attention to the possible role played by less significant factors, like Cranes personal acquaintance with General Van Petten, an instructor at Claverack College, who might have provided him with a first-hand account of the Battle of Antietam.

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