id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_3yzznhchcvgwbfzkhgey6dmq5e Kimberly Engber Toward A More Perfect Union 2012.0 7 .pdf application/pdf 3151 169 55 Secret Histories: Reading Twentieth-Century American Literature. Gently encouraging readers to listen and to participate in the intimate relationships revealed by American writers, Wyatt is most like Leslie Fiedler, who Jennifer Rae Greeson also urges readers familiar with American literature Greeson place family romance at the center of American history. of how national spaces have been imagined by American writers. national identity, the writers in Wyatt's study respond to distinct political and Wyatt a way of reading all of American literature. This habit of leaving the structure of the argument open to readers occasionally leads Wyatt to miss the opportunity to analyze how history has For Wyatt, American history is so bound up with the concept of union that This literary emergence of the South suggests to Greeson "a Both Jennifer Rae Greeson and David Wyatt read fictional romance as Greeson's argument also gains by association with Wyatt's twentieth ./cache/work_3yzznhchcvgwbfzkhgey6dmq5e.pdf ./txt/work_3yzznhchcvgwbfzkhgey6dmq5e.txt