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There are 10 critical essays on A White Heron.

Critical Essays on A White Heron
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Critical Essay by Louis A. Renza
20,220 words, approx. 67 pages
In the excerpt below, Renza discusses the pros and cons of a radical feminist reading of “A White Heron.” Furthermore, he explores the father-daughter relationship and the psychosexual imagery evident in the story.
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Critical Essay by Terry Heller
6,909 words, approx. 23 pages
In the following essay, Heller explores Jewett's use of tense shifts, apostrophes to objects in the story, and direct address by the narrator, techniques that were found in sentimental fiction of Jewett's time but which she largely eschewed.
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Critical Essay by Elizabeth Ammons
5,595 words, approx. 19 pages
In the essay below, Ammons discusses the myths, narrative form, and themes of the story.
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Critical Essay by Jules Zanger
4,263 words, approx. 14 pages
In the following essay, Zanger compares and contrasts the themes, settings, narrative sequences, imagery, and dynamics of “A White Heron” with Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story “Young Goodman Brown” and suggests that these works illuminate each other.
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Critical Essay by Richard Brenzo
3,015 words, approx. 10 pages
In this essay, Brenzo explains the symbolism of Sylvia's climb up the pine tree.
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Critical Essay by Theodore R. Hovet
2,699 words, approx. 9 pages
In the following essay, Hovet analyzes “A White Heron” from a Freudian perspective, determining that the work portrays both the conflict between urban society and the natural world and also the separation of the adult world from that of the child.
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Critical Essay by Katharine T. Jobes
2,581 words, approx. 9 pages
In the essay below, Jobes traces the influence of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel The Pearl of Orr's Island on Jewett's art, particularly her self-definition as an artist.
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Critical Essay by Karen K. Moreno
2,336 words, approx. 8 pages
In the article below, Moreno explicates “A White Heron” as a feminist quest myth in which Sylvia's journey has a psychological, physical, and spiritual meaning that can be interpreted using Jungian terms.
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Critical Essay by Theodore R. Hovet
2,229 words, approx. 7 pages
In the essay below, Hovet demonstrates how “A White Heron” employs the fairy tale structure as defined by Vladimir Propp.
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Critical Essay by Michael Atkinson
2,002 words, approx. 7 pages
In the following extract, Atkinson points out how Jewett portrayed the action in “A White Heron” from different viewpoints, including that of the main characters, the great pine tree anthropomorphized, and directly as the story's narrator.


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