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Charles Brockden Brown

2022
Charles Brockden Brown (b. 1771–d. 1810), America’s first novelist, was born into a Philadelphia Quaker family and experienced all the tumult of the Revolutionary era. He attended the Friends Latin School and apprenticed at the law office of Alexander Wilcocks. He later joined a law society and a Belles Lettres Club, where he developed a love of debate.
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Collected Writings of Charles Brockden Brown

2022
Charles Brockden Brown (1771–1810) was a key writer of the revolutionary era and early U.S. republic, known for his landmark novels and other writings in a variety of genres. The Collected Writings of Charles Brockden Brown presents all of Brown’s non-novelistic writings—letters, political pamphlets, fictions, periodical writings, historical writings ...
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The Oxford Handbook of Charles Brockden Brown

2019
The Oxford Handbook of Charles Brockden Brown provides an up-to-date survey of the life of and full range of writings by Charles Brockden Brown (1771–1810), a key writer of the Atlantic revolutionary age and U.S. Early Republic. Through the late twentieth century, Brockden Brown was best known as an important author of political romances in the gothic ...
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Charles Brockden Brown

2017
Sohn einer Quakerfamilie; ab 1787 juristische Ausbildung; 1798 erste Veroffentlichung (Alcuin: a Dialogue); ab 1799 Herausgeber des Monthly Magazine and American Review; 1803 Grundung des Literary Magazine and American Register; starb an Tuberkulose; einer der ersten nordamerikanischen Romanciers, Versuch einer Karriere als Berufsschrift steller ...
Martin Christadler, Katrin Fischer
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“The Sorrows” of Charles Brockden Brown

PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 1954
The writings of Charles Brockden Brown have evoked a number of curious judgments: Shelley's admiration of Constantia Dudley, for instance, and Margaret Fuller's intimation that she herself might have been a worthy companion for so intellectual and sensitive a man as Brown.
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Prospects for the Study of Charles Brockden Brown

Resources for American Literary Study, 2022
ABSTRACT Beginning in the 1970s and 1980s with the Kent State Edition of Brown’s novels, Brown’s life and writings became the subject of a multi-year editorial project. Similar to Melville and Cather studies, the rise of Brown studies since that time has been steady over the decades and can now be marked by nearly twenty-five years of ...
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“Unspeakable crimes”: Charles Brockden Brown’s Memoirs of Stephen Calvert and the Rights of the Accused [PDF]

open access: yesLaw and Literature, 2009
This article considers, from a contextual and poststructuralist perspective, due process in The Memoirs of Stephen Calvert by the early American novelist (and trained lawyer) Charles Brockden Brown.
Edwards, Justin D., Edwards, JD
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Shelley and Charles Brockden Brown

PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, 1930
Though scholars have long been familiar with Peacock's interesting statement concerning the strong influence exerted upon Shelley by certain novels of Charles Brockden Brown, no one has undertaken to define precisely the extent of Shelley's debt to the American novelist. Professor M. T.
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