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The sheltered life / by Ellen Glasgow.

LIBRA - Athenaeum of Philadelphia Circulating PS3513.L34 S45 1932
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LIBRA Rare PS3513.L34 S5 1932
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Glasgow, Ellen, 1873-1945, author.
Contributor:
Doubleday, Doran & Company, publisher.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Southern States--Social life and customs--Fiction.
Southern States.
Families--Fiction.
Families.
Beauty, Personal--Fiction.
Beauty, Personal.
Young women--Fiction.
Young women.
Prejudices--Fiction.
Prejudices.
Values--Fiction.
Values.
Ethics--Fiction.
Ethics.
Richmond (Va.)--Fiction.
Richmond (Va.).
American fiction--20th century.
American fiction.
Manners and customs.
Virginia--Richmond.
Genre:
novels.
Novels
Fiction
Fiction.
Novels.
Penn Provenance:
Sperr, Portia Hamilton (donor) (Libra Rare copy)
Glasgow, Ellen, 1873-1945 (autograph) (Libra Rare copy)
Wellford, Roberta, 1873-1956 (inscription) (Libra Rare copy)
Physical Description:
5 preliminary leaves, 395 pages ; 20 cm
8vo.
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Garden City, New York : Doubleday, Doran & Company Inc., MCMXXXII [1932]
Summary:
"The sheltered life," writes Carol S. Manning in her afterword to a new paperback edition, is "a jewel of American literature and deserves recognition as a masterpiece of the Southern Renaissance." It is a remarkably unsentimental look at the old South, a society that blindly holds to past values enforced by a strict code of conduct, being overtaken by the new age of industrialization. We see in the families of the Archibalds and the Birdsongs -- especially in the character of General Archibald, the quintessential Southern gentleman, and of the celebrated beauty Mrs. Eva Birdsong -- how upholding these old Southern ideals denies any opportunity for growth and fulfillment. The only hope is in the General's impetuous young granddaughter, Jenny. By the end of the novel, however, she too has learned that beauty is to be most admired and that deception is moral and civilized -- that it is good to tell lies if they make others feel better. Ellen Glasgow's career-long attempt to expose the cruelty of the "cult of beauty worship" and the "philosophy of evasive idealism" that she saw as prevalent in the South's conversations, manners, customs, and literature reaches its zenith in The sheltered life. First published in 1932, it was hailed by Alfred Kazin as Ellen Glasgow's "most moving and penetrating novel. Like Chekhov's The cherry orchard, which it closely resembles in spirit, The sheltered life became a haunting study in social decomposition."
Contents:
The age of make believe
The deep past
The illusion.
Local Notes:
LIBRA Rare copy PS3513.L34 S5 1932 was presented to the Penn Libraries by Portia Hamilton Sperr in 2015. Has inscription: "Roberta Wellford, with love. Ellen Glasgow."
OCLC:
24164488

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