Project Gutenberg Cheyney, Edward Potts, 18611947. Childers, Erskine. Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty,1851-1904. Christie, Agatha, 1891-1976. Chrétien, de Troyes, 12th cent. http://www.surfsteve.com/gutenberg/authors.htm
Extractions: Project Gutenberg Part 1 Authors Use Control-f to find keywords This is Project Gutenberg. This list has been downloaded from: "The Official and Original Project Gutenberg Web Site and Home Page" (http://promo.net/pg/) PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXTS AUTHORS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER Last Updated: Saturday 30 March 2002 by Pietro Di Miceli (webmaster@promo.net) The following etext have been released by Project Gutenberg. This list serves as reference only. For downloading books, please use our catalogs or search at: http://promo.net/pg/ Or check our FTP archive at: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and etext subdirectories. For problems with the FTP archives (ONLY) email gbnewby@ils.unc.edu, be sure to include a description of what happened AND which mirror site you were using. THANKS for visiting Project Gutenberg. * (No Author Attributed) A Young Girl Abbott, David Phelps, 1863-1934 Abbott, Edwin Abbott, 1838-1926 AKA: Square, A Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), 1805-1877 Ackland, T. S. (Thomas Suter), 1817-1892 Adams, Andy, 1859-1935
Service Popular Bibliography. 18741936)) = Chopin, Kate Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty Chopin (United States writerwho described Creole life in Louisiana (1851-1904)) = Christie, Agatha http://www.adeovaleo.com/business_relationships/service.shtml
Webliography - Kate Chopin The Kate Chopin Page. Kate Chopin Web Page. Kate O'Flaherty Chopin (18511904). ResearchAnd Reference Guide. Woman Far Ahead Of Her Time. Back to the Webliography. http://www.nsula.edu/watson_library/webliography/katechopin.html
Extractions: Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. (sh KEY Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie (1897), earned her a reputation as a local colorist, but her novel
Kate Chopin House - Association For The Preservation Of Historic Natchitoches The Association for the Preservation of Historic Natchitoches exists for areas of historic value in Natchitoches, Louisiana. Kate Chopin 1851 1904. In 1899, Kate Chopin published what was considered her finest work The Awakening. ahead of her time. Kate O'Flaherty was born in St. Louis http://www.natchitoches.net/melrose/chopin.htm
Extractions: click here Home Kate Chopin 1851 - 1904 The Awakening . Yet because of it's controversial nature, the novel was met with shock and outrage. The reaction prompted Kate's gradual withdrawal from writing and contributed to her much delayed entry into the halls of literary fame. A master storyteller, she was 75 years ahead of her time. Kate O'Flaherty was born in St. Louis in 1851. Brought up by three generations of widows, she was strong and self-reliant. At the age 19, she married the man she loved, a French-Creole from Louisiana, Oscar Chopin. They settled down in New Orleans to a comfortable life and happy marriage. Oscar encouraged Kate's independent, if somewhat unconventional nature. For four years, Oscar ran the plantation and general store, and Kate raised their children. In 1882, their life abruptly changed again, when Oscar died of swamp fever. Kate was left, at 31, with six children under twelve. For over a year she managed the plantation and store, finally yeilding to her mother's pressure to return to St. Louis. Her mother died the following year.
Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty encyclopediaEncyclopedia Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty, shO pan' PronunciationKey. Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty , 18511904, American author, b. St. Louis. http://www.infoplease.com/cgi-bin/id/A0812046.html
Extractions: Pronunciation Key Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty , American author, b. St. Louis. Of Creole-Irish descent, she married (1870) a Louisiana businessman and lived with him in Natchitoches parish and New Orleans. In these places she acquired an intimate knowledge of Creole and Cajun life, upon which she was to draw in many of her stories. After her husband's death in 1883, she returned with their six children to St. Louis and there began to write. Two collections of tales, Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie (1897), earned her a reputation as a local colorist, but her novel
Extractions: Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference American Heritage Dictionary chopine ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty
Kate Chopin A year later, Eliza O'Flaherty died and Kate began her career Reuben, Paul P. Chapter6 American Naturalism Kate Chopin (1851 1904) PAL Perspective on http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cUSWW/KC/biography.html
Extractions: Chopin, Kate . The Vogue Stories. The Online Archive of Nineteenth-Century Women's Writings . Ed. Glynis Carr. Online. Internet. Posted: Fall 1999. http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gcarr/19cUSWW/KC/biography.html Kate O'Flaherty Chopin was born 8 February 1851 into a prominent family in St.Louis, Missouri. Her father, Thomas O'Flaherty, an Irish immigrant, was a successful St. Louis merchant who was killed in a railroad accident when Kate was only five years old. Kate's mother, Eliza was left a wealthy widow and raised Kate in a household "run by vigorous widows: her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother . . . a community of women who stressed learning, curiosity, and financial independence" (Toth, 187). Kate was formally educated at the Academy of the Sacred Heart in St. Louis where she kept a commonplace book "in which the thoughtful adolescent recorded themes that appear in her later fiction, among them women's roles and the conflict between desire and duty" (Toth, 187). On 9 June 1870, two years after graduating from the Academy, Kate married Oscar Chopin, the son of a planter from Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana. They were married for twelve and a half years, spending nine in New Orleans and three in Cloutierville, Natchitoches Parish. During this time, Kate gave birth to five boys and one girl. "Devoting herself to her family and household, she still managed to reconcile the needs of her own being with the expectations of her conventional milieu. She dressed unconventionally and smoked cigarettes long before smoking was an approved practice among women in her class" (Inge, 91). When Oscar died of malaria in 1882, he left Kate twelve thousand dollars in debt. But being the resourceful woman her matriarchs raised, she ran the family plantation for a year and then returned with her children to her mother in St. Louis. A year later, Eliza O'Flaherty died and Kate began her career as a fiction writer in 1888.
Kate Chopin Kate Chopin (18511904) Kate Chopin was born Katherine O'Flahertyin St. Louis, Missouri in 1851. Though she was of a wealthy and http://www.virginia.edu/~history/courses/fall.97/hius323/chopin.html
Extractions: Bayou Folk (1894). Among the collected pieces was "Desiree's Baby," an exploration of the tension between love and race. Chopin touched off her greatest controversy, however, with the publication of her final novel, The Awakening, in 1899, which tells the tale of a young woman who commits adultery and, later, suicide. The harsh reception of that book, now considered a classic, led Chopin to give up writing almost entirely. She wrote little after its publication, and found publishers reluctant to publish what she did produce. Kate Chopin died of a brain hemorrhage in 1904. Select Bibliography: Arner, Robert, "Pride and Prejudice: Kate Chopin's 'Desiree's Baby'," Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. 25 (Spring 1972). Bonner, Thomas, Jr., "Kate Chopin: An Annotated Bibliography," Bulletin of Bibliography, Vol. 32 (1975). Seyersted, Per, Kate Chopin: A Critical Biography. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1969. Seyersted, Per, and Toth, Emily, eds., A Kate Chopin Miscellany. Natchitoches, La.: Northwestern State University Press, 1979.
EducETH: Chopin, Kate Chopin, Kate 1851 1904 Facts Katherine O'Flaherty, a member of one of St. Louis'oldest families, was born on February 8, 1851. She attended the St. http://www.educeth.ch/english/readinglist/chopink/author.html
Extractions: Can You Help? Author Information Facts About the Author Geography Facts Katherine O'Flaherty, a member of one of St. Louis' oldest families, was born on February 8, 1851. She attended the St. Louis Academy of the Sacred Heart. When she married New Orleans native Oscar Chopin, she encountered the Creole culture which provided settings for many of her works. She wrote more than 100 short stories in the 1890s, and hosted a literary salon in her home at 3317 Morgan Street. Her 1899 novel The Awakening was condemned for its frank treatment of a young woman's sexual and artistic growth. Now it is recognized both for the quality of the writing and for its importance as an early feminist work. eli@phantom.com Biography Chronology About the Author Kate Chopin as Feminist: Subverting the French Androcentric Influence : Jane Le Marquand, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand A Woman Far Ahead of Her Time by Jane Bail Howard Ahead of Her Time : An Overview of the Life and Works of Kate Chopin by Christina Ker Kate Chopin: In Search of Freedom by Floramaria Deter. This feature discusses Chopin's life experiences and how this influenced her writing.
Kate Chopin: In Search Of Freedom 83 and a month later, Kate's adored halfbrother George O'Flaherty, a 23 her writingswere ignored until 1932 when Daniel Rankin published Kate Chopin and Her http://englishlit.miningco.com/library/weekly/aa011700.htm
Extractions: Throughout her life, Kate Chopin, author of " The Awakening " and other short stories such as " A Pair of Silk Stockings Désirée's Baby ," and " The Story of an Hour Katherine O'Flaherty was born on February 8, 1850 (or 1851 as some critics believe) in St. Louis, Missouri to Eliza Faris O'Flaherty, a well-connected Louisiana woman with French roots, and Captain Thomas O'Flaherty, a businessman from Ireland. Her father became one of the first influences in her life. He found her natural curiosity fascinating and encouraged her interests. On November 1, 1855, Kate's father was killed in train accident. Because of his premature death, three strong maternal figures raised Kate: her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother. Madame Victoire Verdon Charleville, Kate's educated great-grandmother taught through the art of storytelling, which is how Kate learned to be a successful storyteller. Through vivid French stories, she gave Kate a taste of the culture and freedom allowed by the French that many Americans during this time disapproved of. Many of the common themes in her grandmother's stories consisted of women struggling with morality, freedom, convention, and desire. The spirit of these stories endures in Kate's own works.
The Quest For The Great American Novel - 26 she was for Catherine O'Flaherty in St. when she graduated, Kate became of the acknowledgedupper she married fairly soon Oscar Chopin a prominent Creole http://angam.ang.univie.ac.at/novel02/vonotes/vo12b.htm
Extractions: The Quest for the Great American Novel subversion: it is sth. that runs against Stephen Crane born 1871 died 1900 he is the Mozart of American lit in many ways he is notoriously a bad boy (naughty) background: he wrote: "my father was a Methodist minister ... a graduate of Princeton, a great, fine, simple mind" (had doctorate of Princeton) Crane can be characterized as the ministers son who rebelled against the morals coming with the ministry the mother comes from a long line of men of the church she was Presbyterian Stephen was the 14 th father held eminent positions in the church the family moved around quite a bit following the fathers positions Port Jervis NY was their most important stop-over Crane's education was at private schools break when he enrolled at Lafayette College (mining engineering) "it did not interest me at all" he excelled not in academics but baseball after 1 semester he switched to Syracuse University only made a show on the baseball field quit after 1 semester (1891) went to N.Y. city set himself up as journalist done for school papers before
Kate Chopin Literary Movements Timeline American Authors English 310/510 English311/511 English 413/513 English 462/562 Kate Chopin (18511904). . http://www.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/enl413/chopin.htm
Index Stories, Listed By Author, Part 3 LUCIE (1947 ); CHINESE tale; Chopin, Kate (OFlaherty) (1851-1904);CHORON, JACQUES; CHOYCE, LESLEY (Willis) (1951- ); CHRISTENSEN http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/isfac/q3.htm
Extractions: Previous Table-of-Contents CHIBBETT, H. S. W. CHILDS, BERNARD ... CHRISTIE, WILLIAM H. ; see pseudonym Cecil B. White CHRISTOPHER, JOE R(andell) CHRISTOPHER, JOHN ; pseudonym of Christopher S. Youd CHRISTOPHER, MATTHEW F(rederick) CHUDAKOVA, MARIETTA CHURCH, CURTIS ... CHURCHILL, JOYCE ; pseudonym of M. John Harrison CHURCHILL, [Sir] WINSTON (Leonard) S(pencer) CIARDI, JOHN CIDONCHA, CARLOS SAIZ ... CLARK, CURT ; pseudonym of Donald E. Westlake CLARK, EVERT CLARK, GEORGE E. CLARK, JOHN ... CLARKE, GERALD ; see pseudonym Alan Grant CLARKE, JOHN CLARKE, MARCUS (Andrew Hislop) CLAUDY, CARL H(arry) ... CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE (1835-1910); see pseudonym Mark Twain CLEMENT, HAL ; pseudonym of Harry Clement Stubbs CLIFF, CATHERINE CLIFFORD, [Sir] HUGH (Charles) CLIFTON, MARK (Irvin) ... COCHRANE, WILLIAM E(ugene) (1926- ); see pseudonyms S. Kye Boult Leo Paige COCKCROFT, W. P. ; see under Cockroft, Wilfred P. COCKROFT, W(ilfred) P. COE, NANCY FORSYTHE COFFIN, CARLYN ... COGSWELL, THEODORE R(ose) (1918-1987); see pseudonym Cogswell Thomas COHEN, JOHN
Chronological List, Part 3 1941 ); CHITTENDEN, MARGARET (Rosalind) (1935- ); CHIZMAR, RICHARD T(homas)(1965- ); Chopin, Kate (OFlaherty) (1851-1904); CHRISTENSON http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/msf/e3.htm
Extractions: Previous Table-of-Contents CASH, ROSANNE CASH-DOMINGO, LEA ; pseudonym of Judith Lea Koretsky CASMIER, SUSAN B. CASPER, SUSAN CASSIDAY, BRUCE (Bingham) ... CAUDWELL, SARAH ; pseudonym of Sarah Cockburn CAUNITZ, WILLIAM J. CAUSEY, JAMES CAUSLEY, CHARLES ... CAVE, GEOFFREY ; see pseudonym Geoffrey Vace CAVE, HUGH B(arnett) (1910- ); see pseudonyms Allen Beck Justin Case Carl Hughes CAVE, PETER (Leslie) ... CECIL, HENRY ; pseudonym of Henry Cecil Leon CENE, AL CENEDELLA, ROBERT CEREN, SANDRA LEVY ... CHAMBERS, WILLIAM E. (1902-1968); see pseudonym CHAN, C. M. CHANCE, GEORGE ; pseudonym of G. T. Fleming-Roberts CHANDLER, C. K. CHANDLER, MARVA CHANDLER, RAYMOND (Thornton) ... CHARLES, HAL ; pseudonym of Hal Blythe Charles Sweet CHARLES, KATE ; pseudonym of Carol A. Chase CHARLES, PAUL CHARLES, ROBERT ; pseudonym of Robert Charles Smith CHARLTON, FORD CHARTERIS, LESLIE ; [born Leslie Charles Bowyer-Yin] (1907-1993) CHARYN, JEROME CHASE, CAROL A. (1950- ); see pseudonym Kate Charles CHASE, ELAINE RACO CHASE, FRANCIS, JR. CHASE, JAMES HADLEY ; pseudonym of CHASE, ROBERT DAVID
Kate Chopin: In Search Of Freedom 83 and a month later, Kate's adored halfbrother George O'Flaherty, a 23 her writingswere ignored until 1932 when Daniel Rankin published Kate Chopin and Her http://marktwain.about.com/library/weekly/aa011700.htm
Extractions: Throughout her life, Kate Chopin, author of " The Awakening " and other short stories such as " A Pair of Silk Stockings Désirée's Baby ," and " The Story of an Hour Katherine O'Flaherty was born on February 8, 1850 (or 1851 as some critics believe) in St. Louis, Missouri to Eliza Faris O'Flaherty, a well-connected Louisiana woman with French roots, and Captain Thomas O'Flaherty, a businessman from Ireland. Her father became one of the first influences in her life. He found her natural curiosity fascinating and encouraged her interests. On November 1, 1855, Kate's father was killed in train accident. Because of his premature death, three strong maternal figures raised Kate: her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother. Madame Victoire Verdon Charleville, Kate's educated great-grandmother taught through the art of storytelling, which is how Kate learned to be a successful storyteller. Through vivid French stories, she gave Kate a taste of the culture and freedom allowed by the French that many Americans during this time disapproved of. Many of the common themes in her grandmother's stories consisted of women struggling with morality, freedom, convention, and desire. The spirit of these stories endures in Kate's own works.
Extractions: Kate Chopin was born Katherine O'Flaherty, the daughter of a successful St. Louis, Missouri, businessman and his French Creole wife. Following her father's death in 1855, Kate was raised by her mother and great-grandmother, who saw to it that she received a Catholic education appropriate to a young woman destined for a place in proper St. Louis society. At 18, she met and within a year married Oscar Chopin, a native of Louisiana, and moved with him to New Orleans where Oscar established himself as a cotton broker. His business initially prospered but, threatened by a series of reversals, Oscar Chopin finally decided to remove his wife and children to the family plantation near Cloutierville in northwestern Louisiana; there he opened a general store and took over management of the family holdings. Kate herself managed the plantation for a year following Oscar's sudden death in 1883, but a year later decided to return with her six children to St. Louis In the years that followed, the literary career of Kate Chopin was launched. Taking as her model the realistic fiction of the French master Maupassant, she began to submit to local papers and then to national magazines like
Joe McCarthy And The Red Scare 333334. Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty. Benet's Readers' Encyclopedia. Chopin, Katherine1851-1904 (Kate Chopin). Contemporary Authors. Eds. Chopin, Kate. http://www.fieldsmith.com/fieldj/notes/joe_mccarthy.htm
Extractions: Joe McCarthy and the Red Scare Individual Reports, Part 1, are due Dec. 3/4. Group products, Part 2, are due Jan. 8/9, 2003. PART 1 . Individually you will research your topic. You will turn in a Xerox of all sources, highlighted and annotated. You will use at least two sources. Only one may be an encyclopediasomething serious, Britannica Use online sources such as Galenet and websites. You will highlight and annotate your sources. Then you will write an annotated bibliography of your two or more sources. You will turn in your articles in your research folder. I will grade this by skimming your articles and then reading your summaries. Plagiarism receives a zero and a referral to the office. You will type the annotated bibliography and turn it in Dec. 3 /4. It will be in your research folder with the highlighted and annotated articles. Topics for Individual Research You will thoroughly research one of these. See requirements in number one above. Define Communism as a political philosophy. Explain its origins in Europe and the United States. Research the following laws: Alien Registration Act (1940)