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Bret Harte

Bret Harte. The Outcasts at Poker Flat. Bret Harte. In 1868 named editor of Overland Monthly. Wrote Outcasts at Poker Flat and Luck of Roaring Camp and became famous

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Bret Harte

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  1. Bret Harte The Outcasts at Poker Flat

  2. Bret Harte • In 1868 named editor of Overland Monthly. • Wrote Outcasts at Poker Flat and Luck of Roaring Camp and became famous • in 1871 signed with The Atlantic Monthly for $10,000 for 12 stories a year, the highest figure offered an American writer up to that time. • He found in England a ready audience for his tales of a past or mythical California long after American readers tired of his formula

  3. Mark Twain’s Opinion • I detest him, because I think his work is 'shoddy.' His forte is pathos but there should be no pathos which does not come out of a man's heart. He has no heart, except his name, and I consider he has produced nothing that is genuine. He is artificial.- interview in Sydney Australia Argus, 9/17/1895

  4. Harte, Realism and Local Color

  5. Harte, Realism and Local Color • Like Twain, Harte’s writing centered on western U.S. and employed local color • Local color or regional literature is fiction and poetry that focuses on the characters, dialect, customs, topography, and other features particular to a specific region. • Local color attempts to portray accurate dialect patterns, mannerisms, thoughts, and topography of a specific region. • Often uses eccentrics as characters, possesses whimsical humor • Local color began in 1880’s with short stories as its principal medium. It gained popularity after the Civil War.

  6. Principles of Realism • Insistence upon and defense of the commonplace • Character more important than plot • Emphasis on morality often self-realized and upon examination of idealism

  7. Identifying Characteristics of Realistic Writing • The morality is intrinsic and relative. Relationships between people and society are explored. • The style is the vehicle which carries philosophy, subject matter and morality. • De-emphasizes authorial comment • Objection towards the omniscient point of view

  8. American Realism

  9. American Realism

  10. American Realism

  11. Allusions • There was a Sabbath lull in the air, which in a settlement unused to Sabbath influences, looked ominous. • In point of fact, Poker Flat was after somebody. • He was too much of a gambler not to accept fate. • We’ve had a streak of bad luck since we left Poker Flat… • Trojan bully and wily Greek wrestled in the winds, and the great pines in the canon, seemed to bow to the wrath of the son of Peleus.

  12. Theme and Naturalism • Naturalism suggests that social conditions, heredity, and environment are inescapable forces that shape human character. In other words, Nature (the being that surrounds humanity in all facets) controls humans and is indifferent to their plight • They are all people of lower class • One of them steals from the others • The weather conspires against them

  13. Archetype • An archetype is an imaginative pattern repeated through the ages. Harte is credited with inventing the Western archetypal hero—self-reliant, solitary, and fearless. The original Westerners were only human, yet why do most people prefer legend over reality?

  14. Archetype

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