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A Supplement to the Plays of William ShakspeareDrama | Geo. F. Cooledge & Brother | 1848 Well-known as a poet, cultural
critic, and novelist, William Gilmore Simms’s undertaking of an edited volume
of Shakespearean apocrypha seems, at first, odd and atypical. Yet, throughout his long career, Simms
displayed a real interest in the theatre, attempting, often unsuccessfully, to
write and stage plays. His
correspondence also shows a recurring concern with the opinions and evaluations
of the great Shakespearean actor Edwin Forrest, for whom Simms wrote several
dramas, none of which were ever staged.[1] Taking into account the author’s deep and
abiding interest ... |
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VasconselosNovel (Romance) | Redfield | 1853 Vasconselos is a Colonial Romance (Simms describes it as
“ante-colonial,” meaning before European settlement in the future South). It treats, in various levels of depth, a host
of subject matters.[1] The most notable is the Spanish effort to
colonize the New World. Within this
exploration, Simms treats the adjustment of Spanish culture from Medieval to
Early Modern standards, the effects of imperialistic ethics upon that culture,
ruling class corruption, the alienation of racial and national minorities, and
the historic De Soto expedition to mainland North America. ... |
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Views and Reviews in American Literature, History and FictionReviews/Essays | Wiley and Putnam | 1845 - 1846 Part of the Wiley and Putnam’s highly influential Library of American
Books, Simms’s two-volume Views and
Reviews in American Literature, History and Fiction, shows the author
theorizing the “American” aspects of American literature, as well as the
relationship between America’s history and its imaginative writing. In this, we can see Simms presenting and
promoting the cultural agenda of the “Young America” movement, whose members
included Melville, Poe, and Hawthorne. Views and Reviews is thus a central text
in understanding the struggle for defining American literature ... |