New Voices in American Studies

Front Cover
Ray Broadus Browne, Donald M. Winkelman, Allen Hayman, Purdue University
Purdue University Studies, 1966 - 165 pages
This collection of essays grew out of the first Mid-America Conference on Literature, History, Popular Culture, and Folklore held at Purdue University in 1965. The purpose of this book is to show that these disciplines are interrelated and necessary to one another. The first section, "Literature," contains an introduction by Hayman and papers by Leo Stoller, Louis Filler, David Sanders, Edwin H. Cady, and Russel B. Nye. Winkelman introduces the second section, "Popular Culture, Folklore, and Ethnomusicology," which contains articles by Browne, Tristram P. Coffin, Américo Paredes, Bruno Nettl, C. E. Nelson, and Winkelman.

From inside the book

Contents

LITERATURE
7
American Radicals and Literary Works of the Midnineteenth
13
Mark Twain and the Upward Mobility of Taste
21
Copyright

11 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1966)

Donald M. Winkelman was assistant professor of English and chairman of the folklore section at Bowling Green University. He edited Abstracts of Folklore Studies and wrote 50 articles, reviews, and papers. Allen Hayman, formerly an associate professor of English at Purdue, was an editor of Accent and an advisory editor of Modern Fiction Studies. He also published articles in several quarterlies.

Bibliographic information