Published: 1 janvier 0101
Résumé:
The text of the Third Edition is based on the 1900 Doubleday
Page edition, with detailed annotations that reveal the
author's use of real people and places in Chicago and New York.
The novel is followed by "A Note on the Text," which discusses
the relationship between this edition's text and that of the
Pennsylvania Edition (1981), and a "Textual Appendix," which
provides a generous sampling of the cuts Dreiser and his friend
Arthur Henry made in the typescript version of "Sister Carrie,"
"Backgrounds and Sources" reprints generous excerpts from
Dreiser's autobiographies and other writings that help
establish his personal connection to the novel. Coverage of the
supposed "suppression" of "Sister Carrie" by its first
publisher is drawn from Dreiser's correspondence with Frank
Norris, Arthur Henry, Walter H. Page, and F. N. Doubleday.
"Criticism" collects thirteen essays, six of them new to the
Third Edition, that discuss Dreiser's distinctive literary
naturalism and narrative technique, the novel's relationship to
American culture, and issues of gender and class in the novel,
among other topics. Contributors include Ellen Moers, Robert
Penn Warren, Amy Kaplan, Alan Trachtenberg, and Donald Pizer,
among others. A Chronology of "Sister Carrie" and a Selected
Bibliography are also included. About the Series: No other
series of classic texts equals the caliber of the Norton
Critical Editions. Each volume combines the most authoritative
text available with the comprehensive pedagogical apparatus
necessary to appreciate the work fully. Careful editing,
first-rate translation, and thorough explanatory annotations
allow each text to meet the highest literary standards
whileremaining accessible to students. Each edition is printed
on acid-free paper and every text in the series remains in
print. Norton Critical Editions are the choice for excellence
in scholarship for students at more than 2,000 universities
worldwide.