SOURCE: Graham, Mary. “The Protests of Writers and Thinkers.” In The Rhetoric of Protest and Reform, 1878-1898, edited by Paul H. Boase, pp. 295-319. Athens: Ohio University Press, 1980.
In the following essay, Graham characterizes four writers—Mark Twain, George Washington Cable, Edward Bellamy, and Henry George—as spokesmen for social reform in late nineteenth-century America.
This is a free excerpt of 53 words. There are 10,032 words (approx.
33 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.
Read the rest of this Criticism with our Nineteenth-Century Social Protest Literature Outside England: Critical Essay by Mary Graham Access Pass.