Description
American Literature and Immediacy investigates the transformative relationship between literary innovation and the rise of visual media technologies in American culture. Heike Schaefer analyzes how photographers, filmmakers, and television producers influenced American writers’ approaches to representation, temporality, and narrative structure throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
The study demonstrates how these technological innovations prompted authors to reimagine literary techniques, creating new forms of immediacy and presence on the page. By examining the intersection of literature with photography, cinema, and broadcast media, Schaefer reveals how American writers both competed with and learned from visual technologies, ultimately reshaping the literary landscape.
As part of the Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture series, this volume contributes significantly to our understanding of media history and literary modernism, offering insights into how technological change drives artistic innovation.







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