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         Davis Rebecca Harding:     more detail
  1. Biography - Davis, Rebecca (Blaine) Harding (1831-1910): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2005-01-01
  2. Silhouettes of American life. by Rebecca Harding Davis. by Davis. Rebecca Harding. 1831-1910., 1892-01-01
  3. Bits of gossip by Rebecca Harding Davis by Davis. Rebecca Harding. 1831-1910., 1904-01-01
  4. John Andross [a novel] by Rebecca Harding Davis. by Davis. Rebecca Harding. 1831-1910., 1874-01-01
  5. Doctor Warrick 's daughters; a novel. by Rebecca Harding Davis. by Davis. Rebecca Harding. 1831-1910., 1896-01-01
  6. Frances Waldeaux [a novel] by Rebecca Harding DavisIllustr by Davis. Rebecca Harding. 1831-1910., 1897-01-01
  7. Dallas Galbraith. by Mrs. R. Harding Davis. by Davis. Rebecca Harding. 1831-1910., 1868-01-01
  8. Waiting for the verdict by Mrs. R. H. Davis by Davis. Rebecca Harding. 1831-1910., 1867-01-01
  9. John Andross a novel by Rebecca Harding, 1831-1910 Davis, 2009-10-26
  10. Rebecca Harding Davis: Writing Cultural Autobiography by Rebecca Harding Davis, 2001-12-01
  11. Rebecca Harding Davis (Twayne's United States Authors Series) by Jane Atteridge Rose, 1993-05
  12. Rebecca Harding Davis and American Realism by Sharon M. Harris, 1991-06

1. PAL: Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
Reuben. Chapter 5 Late Nineteenth Century Rebecca Harding Davis(1831-1910). Outside Links RHD 19CWWW Etext Library RHD .
http://www.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap5/davis.html
PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide Paul P. Reuben Chapter 5: Late Nineteenth Century - Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910) RHD 19CWWW Etext Library: RHD Primary Works Selected Bibliography ... Home Page
(Image source: Legacy Photo Gallery Top Primary Works Books Margret Howth Waiting for the Verdict. Dallas Galbraith Life in the Iron Mills and Other Stories Kitty's Choice or Berrytown and Other Stories John Andross A Law unto Herself Natasqua Kent Hampden Silhouettes of American Life Doctor Warrick's Daughters Frances Waldeaux Bits of Gossip Short Fiction : "Life in the Iron-Mills," Atlantic Monthly , 1861; "David Gaunt." 1862; "John Lamar." 1862; "Paul Blecker." 1863; "Ellen." 1865; "The Harmonists." 1866; "In the Market." 1868; "A Pearl of Great Price." 1868; "Put out of the Way." 1870; "Earthen Pitchers." 1873-74; "Marcia." 1876; "A Day with Doctor Sarah." 1878; "Here and There in the South." 1887. Essays : "Men's Rights." 1869; "Some Testimony in the Case." 1885; "Women in Literature." 1891; "In the Gray Cabins of New England." 1895; "The Disease of Money-Getting." 1902. Top Selected Bibliography Boudreau, Kristin. "The Woman's Flesh of Me': Rebecca Harding Davis's Response to Self-Reliance."

2. Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910) American Writer.
Davis, Rebecca Harding Guide picks. (18311910) American writer. Rebecca HardingDavis was a pioneer of realist fiction in American literature and a journalist
http://classiclit.about.com/cs/davisrebeccahar/
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Davis, Rebecca Harding
Guide picks (1831-1910) American writer. Rebecca Harding Davis was a pioneer of realist fiction in American literature and a journalist whose social commentary was nationally acclaimed.
Bibliography

From Janice Milner Lasseter, Samford University, a good bibliography of primary and secondary sources for this pioneer of American Realism. Biography
A good introduction, from Lasseter. "Boston in the Sixties" From Legacy, in a chapter from her memoirs, Bits of Gossip, Davis remembers the Alcotts, Emerson, Hawthorne and others. Essays on "Life" From the Scribbling Women site, a bio, and essays on Davis's "Life in the Iron Mills," her acclaimed story about working conditions in the iron mills of the 19th Century. . "Life in the Iron Mills"

3. PROJECT GUTENBERG - Catalog By Author - Index - Davis, Rebecca
Etexts by Author. Davis, Rebecca Harding, 18311910. "D" Index
http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/i-_davis_rebecca_harding_.

4. Rebecca Harding Davis, 1831-1910. Bits Of Gossip.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries. Rebecca Harding Davis,18311910 Bits of Gossip. Boston Houghton, Mifflin Co., 1904.
http://docsouth.unc.edu/davisr/menu.html
Rebecca Harding Davis, 1831-1910
Bits of Gossip.
Funding from the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital Library Competition supported the electronic publication of this title. Return to "First Person Narratives of the American South" Home Page Return to Documenting the American South Home Page Feedback URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/davisr/menu.html Last update October 17, 2002

5. Rebecca Harding Davis
Rebecca Harding Davis, links to information and all texts available on the web, information Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910). American Literature Sites
http://www.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/enl311/davis.htm
Literary Movements Timeline American Authors English 310/510 ... English 462/562
Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
American Literature Sites
Foley Library Catalog
Rebecca Harding Davis: Selected Secondary Bibliography
Extensive primary and secondary bibliography
to 1997 at the Legacy site.
Biographical information
from Janice Lassiter, Samford University
Brief biographical sketch
and contexts for "Life in the Iron Mills" from the Public Media Foundation.
Description
of some of Davis's writings.
Picture courtesy of Legacy 's American Women Writers Site Works Available Online (Note: Links in BOLD lead to page images at MOA; links in regular type lead to HTML or text pages.) "Life in the Iron Mills" (from Project Gutenberg)
Life in the Iron Mills
Atlantic , April 1861) "An Ignoble Martyr." Harper's New Monthly Magazine 80 (Mar. 1890): 604-610.
"Anne."
Harper's New Monthly Magazine 78 (April 1889): 744-750 Anne. A Story
Are Women to Blame? (
North American Review
"At The Station" (Scribner's, 1888)
... "Boston in the Sixties" from Bits of Gossip "Blind Tom."

6. Rebecca Harding Davis, 1831-1910. Bits Of Gossip
Bits of Gossip Electronic Edition. Davis, Rebecca Harding, 18311910.Funding from the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital
http://docsouth.unc.edu/davisr/davis.html
Bits of Gossip:
Electronic Edition
Davis, Rebecca Harding, 1831-1910
Funding from the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital Library Competition
supported the electronic publication of this title. Text scanned (OCR) by Jordan Davis
Text encoded by Jill Kuhn and Natalia Smith
First edition, 1997.
ca. 350K
Academic Affairs Library, UNC-CH
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
Call number PS1517 .B5 1904 (Davis Library, UNC-CH)
Documenting the American South, or, The Southern Experience in 19th-century America.
        All double right and left quotation marks are encoded as " and " respectively.
Library of Congress Subject Headings, 21st edition, 1998
    LC Subject Headings:
  • Davis, Rebecca Harding, 1831-1910 Childhood and youth. Southern States Social life and customs. Women Southern States Social life and customs.

      Natalia Smith, project editor, finished TEI-conformant encoding and final proofing.
    • Jill Kuhn finished TEI/SGML encoding
    • Jordan Davis finished scanning (OCR) and proofing.

7. Rebecca Harding Davis, 1831-1910. Bits Of Gossip.
Bits of Gossip. By Rebecca Harding Davis, 18311910
http://metalab.unc.edu/docsouth/davisr/menu.html
Rebecca Harding Davis, 1831-1910
Bits of Gossip.
Funding from the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital Library Competition supported the electronic publication of this title. Return to "First Person Narratives of the American South" Home Page Return to Documenting the American South Home Page Feedback URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/davisr/menu.html Last update October 17, 2002

8. Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910) Contributing Editor Judith Roman-Royer Classroom Issues and Strategies
http://www.georgetown.edu/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/davis.html
Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
Contributing Editor: Judith Roman-Royer
Classroom Issues and Strategies
Problems in teaching Davis include: dialect, allusions, confusing dialogue, hard-to-identify speakers, vague frame story, religious solution, and the juxtaposition of sentimental language with religiosity and realism. To address these problems consider the following: 1. Explain the dialect (see the footnotes). 2. Try to ignore the allusions; most are not important to the heart of meaning. 3. The names of characters, their jobs, the speakers, and their roles need to be clarified. Kirby, son of Kirby the mill ownerHe is aware of the problems of the workers but sees them as insoluble; he takes the attitude of Pontius Pilate. Dr. May, a town physicianHe is idealistic, sympathetic to the workers, but naive about reality and thus unintentionally cruel to Hugh. "Captain"The reporter for the city paper. Mitchell, Kirby's intellectual brother-in-law, visitor to the SouthHe is cold, cynically socialistic. 4. Discuss the frame story. Careful readers will find inconsistencies in the frame narratives that explain the narrator's perspective. Early in the story, the narrator "happens" to be in the house, apparently a visitor, but at the end of the story, the house and statue of the korl woman seem to belong to her. The story of the Wolfe family is said to be set thirty years in the past, so how did the narrator come to know it in such intimate detail? One of my students suggested that the narrator may be Janey, who has somehow risen above her environment and become a writer, a solution that is provocative but unsubstantiated by the text.

9. D - Authors And Writers - Classic Literature
Davis, Rebecca Harding (18311910) American writer. Rebecca HardingDavis was a pioneer of realist fiction in American literature
http://classiclit.about.com/cs/d/
zfp=-1 About Homework Help Literature: Classic Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
Literature: Classic
with Esther Lombardi
Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects ESSENTIALS Book Reviews Directory How to Directory ... All articles on this topic Stay up-to-date!
Subscribe to our newsletter.
Advertising Free Credit Report
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D - Last Names
Guide picks Find authors/writers with the last name starting with "D"...
d'Arezzo, Guittone

(1230-1294) Italian writer. Founder of the Tuscan school of courtly poetry. Guittone's "Ahi, lasso! o e stagion di doler tanto" ("Ah, alas! How long does so much misery last?"), written after the Florentine Guelf defeat at Montaperti in 1260, is a noble poem. His later work includes sonnets and moral lyrics. Daniel, Samuel
(1562-1619) British writer. Samuel Daniel is known for Delia (which was praised by Edmund Spenser), The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses (1604), and Philotas. Danzai, Osamu (1909-1948) Japanese writer. Pseudonym of Tsushima Shuji. Osamu Danzai became "the literary voice of his generation." He's known for works like Shayo (1947, The Setting Sun) and Ningen Shikkaku (1948, No Longer Human). Darwin, Charles

10. Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910). Contributing Editor Judith Roman-Royer.Classroom Issues and Strategies. Problems in teaching Davis
http://college.hmco.com/english/heath/syllabuild/iguide/davis.html
Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
Contributing Editor: Judith Roman-Royer
Classroom Issues and Strategies
Problems in teaching Davis include: dialect, allusions, confusing dialogue, hard-to-identify speakers, vague frame story, religious solution, and the juxtaposition of sentimental language with religiosity and realism. To address these problems consider the following: 1. Explain the dialect (see the footnotes). 2. Try to ignore the allusions; most are not important to the heart of meaning. 3. The names of characters, their jobs, the speakers, and their roles need to be clarified. Kirby, son of Kirby the mill ownerHe is aware of the problems of the workers but sees them as insoluble; he takes the attitude of Pontius Pilate. Dr. May, a town physicianHe is idealistic, sympathetic to the workers, but naive about reality and thus unintentionally cruel to Hugh. "Captain"The reporter for the city paper. Mitchell, Kirby's intellectual brother-in-law, visitor to the SouthHe is cold, cynically socialistic. 4. Discuss the frame story. Careful readers will find inconsistencies in the frame narratives that explain the narrator's perspective. Early in the story, the narrator "happens" to be in the house, apparently a visitor, but at the end of the story, the house and statue of the korl woman seem to belong to her. The story of the Wolfe family is said to be set thirty years in the past, so how did the narrator come to know it in such intimate detail? One of my students suggested that the narrator may be Janey, who has somehow risen above her environment and become a writer, a solution that is provocative but unsubstantiated by the text.

11. Heath Anthology Of American Literature 4/e Rebecca Harding Davis - Author Page
500 Sharon M. Harris, Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910) A Bibliography of SecondaryCriticism, 1958-1986, Bulletin of Bibliography 45 (1988) 233-46 Sharon M
http://college.hmco.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/early_nine
Site Orientation Heath Orientation Timeline Access Author Profile Pages by: Table of Contents Authors by Name Authors by Year Internet Research Guide Textbook Site for: The Heath Anthology of American Literature , Fourth Edition
Paul Lauter, General Editor
Rebecca Harding Davis
When “Life in the Iron-Mills” appeared in the Atlantic Monthly in 1861 it was immediately recognized as a pioneering achievement, a story that captured a new subject for American literature—the grim lives of the industrial workers in the nation’s mills and factories. Herman Melville’s “The Tartarus of Maids” (1855) had previously but more briefly penetrated into the dark interiors of the industrial structures that were transfiguring the American landscape. Harding’s story was the first extended treatment, a harsh portrayal of back-breaking labor and emotional and spiritual starvation. In its depiction of the lives of the workers, from their diet of cold, rancid potatoes to the crimes they were driven to commit, it introduced new elements of both realism and naturalism into American fiction.
“Life in the Iron-Mills” was the first published work of its thirty-year-old author, Rebecca Harding, resident of the industrial town of Wheeling, Virginia (now West Virginia). It brought her fame, the acquaintance of many eminent New England authors, a valued, lifelong friendship with Annie Fields, wife of James T. Fields, editor of the

12. Davis, Rebecca Harding. "Bits Of Gossip"
Bits of gossip, by Rebecca Harding Davis, 18311910
http://docsouth.unc.edu/davisr/title.html
Davis, Rebecca Harding, 1831-1910
Bits of Gossip
Return to Menu Page for Bits of Gossip by Rebecca Harding Davis
Return to "First-Person Narratives of the American South, Beginnings to 1920" Home Page
Return to Documenting the American South Home Page
Feedback

URL: http://docsouth.unc.edu/davisr/title.html
Last update November 07, 2000

13. Rebecca Harding Davis
462/562 Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910). American Literature SitesProject Muse Journals Foley Library Catalog. Rebecca Harding
http://guweb2.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/enl311/davis.htm
Literary Movements Timeline American Authors English 310/510 ... English 462/562
Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
American Literature Sites
Foley Library Catalog
Rebecca Harding Davis: Selected Secondary Bibliography
Extensive primary and secondary bibliography
to 1997 at the Legacy site.
Biographical information
from Janice Lassiter, Samford University
Brief biographical sketch
and contexts for "Life in the Iron Mills" from the Public Media Foundation.
Description
of some of Davis's writings.
Picture courtesy of Legacy 's American Women Writers Site Works Available Online (Note: Links in BOLD lead to page images at MOA; links in regular type lead to HTML or text pages.) "Life in the Iron Mills" (from Project Gutenberg)
Life in the Iron Mills
Atlantic , April 1861) "An Ignoble Martyr." Harper's New Monthly Magazine 80 (Mar. 1890): 604-610.
"Anne."
Harper's New Monthly Magazine 78 (April 1889): 744-750 Anne. A Story
Are Women to Blame? (
North American Review
"At The Station" (Scribner's, 1888)
... "Boston in the Sixties" from Bits of Gossip "Blind Tom."

14. Rebecca Harding Davis: Selected Secondary Bibliography
. Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910) A Bibliography of Secondary Criticism,1958-1986. Bulletin of Bibliography 45.4 (1988) 233-46.
http://guweb2.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/enl311/davisrh.htm
Literary Movements Timeline American Authors English 310/510 ...
Rebecca Harding Davis : Selected Secondary Bibliography
Boudreau, Kristin. "'The Woman's Flesh of Me': Rebecca Harding Davis's Response to Self-Reliance." American Transcendental Quarterly
Buckley, J. F. "Living in the Iron Mills: A Tempering of Nineteenth-Century America's Orphic Poet." Journal of American Culture
Curnutt, Kirk. "Direct Addresses, Narrative Authority, and Gender in Rebecca Harding Davis's 'Life in the Iron Mills'." Style
Dauber, Kenneth. "Realistically Speaking: Authorship in the Late Nineteenth Century and Beyond." American Literary History
Davis, Rebecca Harding, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Documenting the American South (Project), and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Bits of Gossip . Electronic ed. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Academic Affairs Library University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1997.
Davis, Rebecca Harding, Janice Milner Lasseter, and Sharon M. Harris.

15. PROJECT GUTENBERG - Catalog By Author - Davis, Rebecca Harding,
Etexts by Author Davis, Rebecca Harding, 18311910 D Index MainIndex Frances Waldeaux LANGUAGE English SUBJECT Fiction
http://www.informika.ru/text/books/gutenb/gutind/TEMP/davis_rebecca_harding_.htm

16. Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
American Literature on the Web. Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910). Writings Walhalla May 1880 (U.Virginia); Margret Howth A Story of To-Day 1862 .
http://www.nagasaki-gaigo.ac.jp/ishikawa/amlit/d/davis19re.htm

Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)

17. Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910) At Famous Creative Women
. . Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910) born on Jun 24 US author, journalist, critic.She wrote Waiting for the Verdict, 1867 and Bits of Gossip, 1904.
http://www.famouscreativewomen.com/one/1581.htm
FCW Home Browse by Month Lookup Indexes Search eLibrary ... Bemorecreative Famous Creative Women presents. . . Rebecca Harding Davis
(1831-1910) born on Jun 24 US author, journalist, critic. She wrote "Waiting for the Verdict," 1867 and "Bits of Gossip," 1904.
Previous Set of Quotes
Next Set of Quotes Every child was taught from his cradle that money was Mammon, the chief agent of the flesh and the devil. As he grew up it was his duty as a Christian and a gentleman to appear to despise filthy lucre, whatever his secret opinion of it might be.
One sees that dead, vacant look steal over the rarest, finest of women's faces . . . in the very midst, it may be, of their warmest summer's day; and then one can guess at the secret of intolerable solitude that lies hid beneath the delicate laces . . . "Reform is born of need, not pity. No vital movement of the people has worked down, for good or evil; fermented, instead, carried up the heaving, cloggy mass." Be just not like man's law, which seizes on one isolated fact, but like God's judging angel, whose clear, sad eye saw all the countless cankering days of this man,s life. . .. While the light burning within may have been divine, the outer case of the lamp was assuredly cheap enough. Whitman was, from first to last, a boorish, awkward poseur.

18. 200 Famous Women
actress; Davis, Rebecca Harding (18311910) US author, journalist,critic; DeMille, Agnes George (1905-1993) US choreographer, dancer;
http://www.famouscreativewomen.com/women-atoz.html
FCW Home Browse by Month Lookup Indexes Search eLibrary ... Bemorecreative
Famous Creative Women by Last Name
Use your browser's "FIND" function to locate a specific individual.
  • Abbott, Berenice US photographer Ace, Jane Sherwood US actress, comedienne Ackerman, Diane US poet, writer, social worker Adams, Abigail US first lady Addams, Jane US social worker, suffragist Adler, Polly US madam Aimee, Anouk French actress Alcott, Amy Strum US golfer Alcott, Louisa May US novelist Alexander, Shana US news commentator Allen, Gracie US comedienne Allen, Paula Gunn US-American Indian poet, writer Alley, Kirstie US actress Anderson, Elizabeth Garrett English physician Anderson, Margaret US editor Annis, Francesca English actress Anthony, Susan B. US social reformer, suffragist Arbus, Diane US photographer Arden, Elizabeth US cosmetics executive Arendt, Hannah German-US political scientist Ashford, Daisy English novelist Ashley, Elizabeth US actress Ashton-Warner, Sylvia New Zealander educator, writer, novelist, poet Asquith, Margot English author Astell, Mary English feminist, writer Astor, Mary
  • 19. Rebecca Harding Davis
    American Studies on the Internet. Literature 18651914 Rebecca HardingDavis Rebecca Harding Davis, 1831-1910 Louisa May Alcott 1832-1888
    http://www.jochenbast.de/links/literature/1865-1914/davis.htm
    American Studies on the Internet
    Literature Rebecca Harding Davis Rebecca Harding
    Davis, 1831-1910
    Louisa May Alcott
    Samuel Langhorne
    ...
    Jack London,

    Rebecca Harding Davis
    Title: Rebecca Harding Davis
    URL: http://www.gonzaga.edu/faculty/campbell/enl311/davis.htm
    In: Donna M. Campbell' site at the U of Gonzaga
    Author: Donna M. Campbell
    Type: link collection
    Content: This is a link collection to biographical web sites on Davis and to online texts. Many of them link to the Making of America web sites at University of Michigan and Cornell University Please tell me about any dead links and mistakes or recommend a site: deadlink@ mistakes@ recommendasite@ American Studies on the Internet Author: Jochen Bast

    20. D
    Lawrence, Dreiser, Theodore,. Rebecca H. Davis. Rebecca Harding Davis;Rebecca Harding Davis (18311910); Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910);
    http://home.att.net/~russelj2/amlit/d.html
    D
    Davis, Rebecca H. Dickinson, Emily
    Dos Passos, John
    Douglass, Frederick ...
    Dreiser, Theodore
    Rebecca H. Davis
  • Rebecca Harding Davis
  • Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
  • Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910)
  • Biography: Rebecca Harding Davis ...
  • Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910): Classroom Issues and Strategies
  • Emily Dickinson
    Picture courtesy of San Antonio College LitWeb
  • Emily Dickinson
  • Emily Dickinson (SP ?)
  • Poetry Archives: Emily Dickinson 1830-1886 ...
  • Emily Dickinson On-line
  • John Dos Passos
    Picture courtesy of American Writers Pictorial Index
  • John Dos Passos (1896-1970)
  • John Dos Passos - an amateur appreciation page
  • DOS PASSOS, John
  • Frederick Douglass
    Picture courtesy of American Writers Pictorial Index
  • African American Historical Figures: Frederick Douglass
  • American Visionaries: Frederick Douglass
  • Frederick Douglass - Afro-American Almanac ...
  • Etexts by Author (Project Gutenberg)
  • W.E.B. Dubois
    Picture courtesy of San Antonio College LitWeb
  • The W.E.B.DuBois Virtual University
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