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The Sportswriter Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Raymond A. Schroth, S.J.

This literature criticism consists of approximately 11 pages of analysis & critique of The Sportswriter.
This section contains 3,018 words
(approx. 11 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Richard Ford - Critical Essay by Raymond A. Schroth, S.J.

Critical Essay by Raymond A. Schroth, S.J.

SOURCE: Schroth, S.J., Raymond A. “America's Moral Landscape in the Fiction of Richard Ford.” Christian Century (1 March 1989): 227-30.

In the following essay, Schroth asserts that, in The Sportswriter, Ford successfully presents “a broad and complex cross-section of American middle-class life.”

I discovered Richard Ford while looking for a novel to accompany Tocqueville, Habits of the Heart, and the travel narratives of Jonathan Raban and William Least Heat Moon in a course on American character. I sought one that would help illuminate the moral consciousness of America in the '80s, a nation bogged down and hemmed in by the individualism it had long touted as its strength; a tough and belligerent nation, still stunned and whimpering from the Vietnam war; a country whose politicians were campaigning on “family values,” while it seemed that hardly a family was not sundered by abandonment or divorce; a post-Christian society, even pagan, that...
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This section contains 3,018 words
(approx. 11 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Richard Ford - Critical Essay by Raymond A. Schroth, S.J.
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Richard Ford - Critical Essay by Raymond A. Schroth, S.J. from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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