Friends of Bill F.: Alcohol, Recovery, and Social Progress in Southern Fiction
In Friends of Bill F.: Alcohol, Recovery, and Social Progress in Southern Fiction, I argue that many southern writers use the trope of drunkenness to investigate the Souths often hesitant stance toward social change. The overwhelming presence of hard drinking in southern fiction is so ubiquitous th...
Main Author: | Picken, Conor Adam |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Stauffer, Suzanne |
Format: | Others |
Language: | en |
Published: |
LSU
2013
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-04092013-103115/ |
Similar Items
-
Is southern poetry southerner than southern fiction? Is southern poetry southerner than southern fiction?
by: William Harmon
Published: (2008-04-01) -
Bill costley's rag(a)s Bill costley's rag(a)s
by: Rita Balzar
Published: (2008-04-01) -
Clear-Cutting Eden: Representations of Nature in Southern Fiction, 1930-1950
by: Rieger, Christopher B.
Published: (2002) - "A Primitive and Frightening South": Gender and Sexual Violence in Twentieth and Twenty-First Century Southern Fiction
-
Ritual and the Poetics of Memory in Fred D'Aguiar's *Bill of Rights*
by: Pexa, Christopher John
Published: (2009)