Faking It: Social Bluffing and Class Difference in Howells's The Rise of Silas Lapham
2010 ◽
Vol 83
(2)
◽
pp. 283-312
◽
In Howells's distinctive vision of the social world, there is something inimitable about upper- bourgeois culture—something that defies the aspirants' attempts to acquire or fake upper-class behaviors. In The Rise of Silas Lapham, he dramatizes for readers what none of his characters can articulate but all of them finally “feel,” namely the “fine yet impassable” differences between classes.
Keyword(s):
Keyword(s):
Keyword(s):
2017 ◽
Vol 24
(1)
◽
pp. 131-137
Keyword(s):