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Edgar Allan Poe
Selected Poetry, Tales, and Essays, Authoritative Texts with Essays on Three Critical ControversiesFirst Edition| ©2016 Edgar Allan Poe; Edited by Jared Gardner and Elizabeth Hewitt
Like other volumes in the Case Studies in Critical Controversy series, this edition is designed for “teaching the conflicts”— in this case, the conflicts surrounding the work of Edgar Allan Poe, one of the most popular yet contested literary figures in all of American Literature.
The...
Like other volumes in the Case Studies in Critical Controversy series, this edition is designed for “teaching the conflicts”— in this case, the conflicts surrounding the work of Edgar Allan Poe, one of the most popular yet contested literary figures in all of American Literature.
The text incorporates selections from Poe’s fiction, poetry and nonfiction, along with critical essays representing three major critical and cultural controversies about Poe and his work: aesthetics and the literary marketplace; race; and gender and sexuality.
The literature and critical essays are supported by distinctive editorial matter that introduces students to critical conflict in literary studies, to Poe’s life and work, to each critical controversy, and to arguing about the controversies.
The edition helps students grapple not only with the critical issues concerning Poe, but also with cultural debates about literature itself.
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Teach Critical Controversies about Edgar Allan Poe
Like other volumes in the Case Studies in Critical Controversy series, this edition is designed for “teaching the conflicts”— in this case, the conflicts surrounding the work of Edgar Allan Poe, one of the most popular yet contested literary figures in all of American Literature.
The text incorporates selections from Poe’s fiction, poetry and nonfiction, along with critical essays representing three major critical and cultural controversies about Poe and his work: aesthetics and the literary marketplace; race; and gender and sexuality.
The literature and critical essays are supported by distinctive editorial matter that introduces students to critical conflict in literary studies, to Poe’s life and work, to each critical controversy, and to arguing about the controversies.
The edition helps students grapple not only with the critical issues concerning Poe, but also with cultural debates about literature itself.
Features
• A sampling of Poe’s most controversial fiction, poetry, and essays
• Classic and contemporary criticism on three key controversies about Poe and his work
• Editorial apparatus that helps students understand and enter the critical conversation
• Classic and contemporary criticism on three key controversies about Poe and his work
• Editorial apparatus that helps students understand and enter the critical conversation
New to This Edition

Edgar Allan Poe
First Edition| ©2016
Edgar Allan Poe; Edited by Jared Gardner and Elizabeth Hewitt
Digital Options

Edgar Allan Poe
First Edition| 2016
Edgar Allan Poe; Edited by Jared Gardner and Elizabeth Hewitt
Table of Contents
Contents
Why Study Critical Controversies?
PART ONE: Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Work
The Life of Edgar Allan Poe
POETRY
Tamerlane
The Sleeper
The City In The Sea
To Helen
Lenore
Israfel
The Raven
To Marie Louise
Annabel Lee
For Annie
TALES
Metzengerstein
Berenice
Ligeia
How To Write A Blackwood Article
The Man That Was Used Up
The Fall Of The House Of Usher
William Wilson
The Man Of The Crowd
The Murders In The Rue Morgue
The Oval Portrait
The Pit And The Pendulum
The Tell-Tale Heart
The Black Cat
The Purloined Letter
The Imp of the Perverse
The Cask of Amontillado
Hop-Frog
ESSAYS
Some Secrets of the Magazine Prison-House
The Philosophy Of Composition
PART ONE: Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Work
The Life of Edgar Allan Poe
POETRY
Tamerlane
The Sleeper
The City In The Sea
To Helen
Lenore
Israfel
The Raven
To Marie Louise
Annabel Lee
For Annie
TALES
Metzengerstein
Berenice
Ligeia
How To Write A Blackwood Article
The Man That Was Used Up
The Fall Of The House Of Usher
William Wilson
The Man Of The Crowd
The Murders In The Rue Morgue
The Oval Portrait
The Pit And The Pendulum
The Tell-Tale Heart
The Black Cat
The Purloined Letter
The Imp of the Perverse
The Cask of Amontillado
Hop-Frog
ESSAYS
Some Secrets of the Magazine Prison-House
The Philosophy Of Composition
PART TWO: A Case Study in Critical Controversy
THE CONTROVERSY OVER AESTHETICS AND THE LITERARY MARKETPLACE; OR, IS POE A LITERARY GENIUS OR A POP CULTURE HACK?
James Russell Lowell, "Edgar Allan Poe" (1845)
James Russell Lowell, from "A Fable for Critics" (1848)
Rufus Griswold, "Death of Edgar A. Poe" (1849)
Rufus Griswold, "Preface" (1850)
Charles Baudelaire, "New Notes on Edgar Poe" (1857)
Sarah Helen Whitman, "Edgar Poe and His Critics" (1860)
Henry James, "Charles Baudelaire" (1876)
George Bernard Shaw, "Edgar Allan Poe" (1909)
Yvor Winters, "Edgar Allan Poe: A Crisis in the History of American Obscurantism" (1937)
T. S. Eliot, "From Poe to Valery" (1949)
Allen Tate "The Poetry of Edgar Allan Poe' (1968)
E. L. Doctorow, "Our Edgar" (2006)
J. Gerald Kennedy, "Poe in Our Time" (2001)
Scott Peeples, "Lionizing; Poe as Cultural Signifier" (2004)
THE CONTROVERSY OVER RACE; OR, WHAT DID POE HAVE TO SAY ABOUT AFRICAN AMERICANS AND SLAVERY?
Joan Dayan, "Amorous Bondage: Poe, Ladies, and Slaves" (1994)
Lesley Ginsberg, "Slavery and the Gothic Horror of Poe's 'The Black Cat'" (1998)
Terence Whalen, "Average Racism: Poe, Slavery, and the Wages of Literary Nationalism" (1999)
Paul Gilmore, "'A Rara Avis in Terris'; Poe's 'Hop Frog' and Race in the Antebellum Freak Show" (2001)
Maurice Lee, "Absolute Poe: His System of Transcendental Racism" (2003)
THE CONTROVERSY OVER GENDER AND SEXUALITY; OR, WHY IS POE SO OBSESSED WITH DEAD WOMEN?
Beth Ann Bassein, "Poe's Most Poetic Subject" (1982)
J. Gerald Kennedy, "Horrors of Translation: The Death of a Beautiful Woman" (1987)
Cynthia S. Jordan, "Poe's Re-Vision: The Recovery of the Second Story" (1987)
Leland S. Person, "Poe's Poetics of Desire: 'Th'Expanding Eye to the Loved Object'" (1999)
Eliza Richards, "Women's Place in Poe Studies" (2000)
Joseph Church, "'To Make Venus Vanish': Misogyny as Motive in Poe's 'Murder's in the Rue Morgue'" (2006)
Valerie Rohy, "Ahistorical" (2006)
THE CONTROVERSY OVER AESTHETICS AND THE LITERARY MARKETPLACE; OR, IS POE A LITERARY GENIUS OR A POP CULTURE HACK?
James Russell Lowell, "Edgar Allan Poe" (1845)
James Russell Lowell, from "A Fable for Critics" (1848)
Rufus Griswold, "Death of Edgar A. Poe" (1849)
Rufus Griswold, "Preface" (1850)
Charles Baudelaire, "New Notes on Edgar Poe" (1857)
Sarah Helen Whitman, "Edgar Poe and His Critics" (1860)
Henry James, "Charles Baudelaire" (1876)
George Bernard Shaw, "Edgar Allan Poe" (1909)
Yvor Winters, "Edgar Allan Poe: A Crisis in the History of American Obscurantism" (1937)
T. S. Eliot, "From Poe to Valery" (1949)
Allen Tate "The Poetry of Edgar Allan Poe' (1968)
E. L. Doctorow, "Our Edgar" (2006)
J. Gerald Kennedy, "Poe in Our Time" (2001)
Scott Peeples, "Lionizing; Poe as Cultural Signifier" (2004)
THE CONTROVERSY OVER RACE; OR, WHAT DID POE HAVE TO SAY ABOUT AFRICAN AMERICANS AND SLAVERY?
Joan Dayan, "Amorous Bondage: Poe, Ladies, and Slaves" (1994)
Lesley Ginsberg, "Slavery and the Gothic Horror of Poe's 'The Black Cat'" (1998)
Terence Whalen, "Average Racism: Poe, Slavery, and the Wages of Literary Nationalism" (1999)
Paul Gilmore, "'A Rara Avis in Terris'; Poe's 'Hop Frog' and Race in the Antebellum Freak Show" (2001)
Maurice Lee, "Absolute Poe: His System of Transcendental Racism" (2003)
THE CONTROVERSY OVER GENDER AND SEXUALITY; OR, WHY IS POE SO OBSESSED WITH DEAD WOMEN?
Beth Ann Bassein, "Poe's Most Poetic Subject" (1982)
J. Gerald Kennedy, "Horrors of Translation: The Death of a Beautiful Woman" (1987)
Cynthia S. Jordan, "Poe's Re-Vision: The Recovery of the Second Story" (1987)
Leland S. Person, "Poe's Poetics of Desire: 'Th'Expanding Eye to the Loved Object'" (1999)
Eliza Richards, "Women's Place in Poe Studies" (2000)
Joseph Church, "'To Make Venus Vanish': Misogyny as Motive in Poe's 'Murder's in the Rue Morgue'" (2006)
Valerie Rohy, "Ahistorical" (2006)
Appendix: How to Write about Critical Controversy over the Work of Edgar Allan Poe
About the Editors
About the Editors

Edgar Allan Poe
First Edition| 2016
Edgar Allan Poe; Edited by Jared Gardner and Elizabeth Hewitt
Authors

Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Allan Poe (January 19, 1809 – October 7, 1849) was an American author and poet; his short stories include "The Fall of the House of Usher," "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," "The Pit and the Pendulum," and "The Tell-Tale Heart."

Jared Gardner

Elizabeth Hewitt

Edgar Allan Poe
First Edition| 2016
Edgar Allan Poe; Edited by Jared Gardner and Elizabeth Hewitt
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