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Road eBook

by Jack London
language: english
Publisher: Rutgers University Press, May of 2006 ‧
47,63€
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In 1894, an eighteen-year-old Jack London quit his job shoveling coal, hopped a freight train, and left California on the first leg of a ten thousand-mile odyssey. His adventure was an exaggerated version of the unemployed migrations made by millions of boys, men, and a few women during the original "great depression of the 1890s. By taking to the road, young wayfarers like London forged a vast hobo subculture that was both a product of the new urban industrial order and a challenge to it. As London's experience suggests, this hobo world was born of equal parts desperation and fascination. "I went on 'The Road,'" he writes, "because I couldn't keep away from it . . . Because I was so made that I couldn't work all my life on 'one same shift'; because-well, just because it was easier to than not to." The best stories that London told about his hoboing days can be found in The Road, a collection of nine essays with accompanying illustrations, most of which originally appeared in Cosmopolitan magazine between 1907 and 1908. His virile persona spoke to white middle-class readers who vicariously escaped their desk-bound lives and followed London down the hobo trail. The zest and humor of his tales, as Todd DePastino explains in his lucid introduction, often obscure their depth and complexity. The Road is as much a commentary on London's disillusionment with wealth, celebrity, and the literary marketplace as it is a picaresque memoir of his youth.

Road

by Jack London

Property Description
ISBN: 9780813540122
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Release Date: May of 2006
Language: English
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility: PDF para ADE
Collection: Subterranean Lives
Categories: eBooks in English > Tourist Guides and Maps > North America
EAN: 9780813540122

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jack London

A biografia de Jack London (1876-1916) é tão prodigiosa como a obra que nos legou e que o tornaria mundialmente famoso: narrativas do alto-mar (O Cruzeiro do Snark, 1911) e de paisagens nevadas (O Filho do Lobo, 1900), viagens ao lado negro da sociedade industrial (O Povo do Abismo, 1903), entre errantes sem eira nem beira (Vagabundos Cruzando a Noite, 1907), uma fértil correspondência e textos autobiográficos, como Memórias de Um Alcoólico – John Barleycorn (1913). Uma das figuras mais românticas do seu tempo, autodidata e orador eloquente, foi também um homem dos mil ofícios: operário fabril na Califórnia, garimpeiro no Klondike e correspondente de guerra no Japão. Socialista convicto, aliou a sede de aventuras à fome de justiça social, e a coragem individual à defesa da solidariedade entre os homens.

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