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The Professor's House, The Professor's House, 0803214286, 0-8032-1428-6, 978-0-8032-1428-6, 9780803214286, Willa Cather
Historical essay by James Woodress
Explanatory notes by James Woodress with Kari A. Ronning
Textual editing by Frederick M. Link, Willa Cather Scholarly Editio
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The Professor's House
Willa Cather Historical essay by James Woodress Explanatory notes by James Woodress with Kari A. Ronning Textual editing by Frederick M. Link
hardcover
2002.
589 pp.
14 photographs, 2 maps
978-0-8032-1428-6
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The scholarly edition of The Professor's House incorporates into its textual analysis findings from a recently discovered and significantly reworked draft of the novel. Willa Cather's perennial claims that there were no extant drafts make this discovery especially important to Cather scholars. Written in 1925, when she was fifty-two years old, The Professor's House was Cather's seventh novel. Cather explained that in this novel she had attempted two structural experiments. The first experiment she took from the practice of early French and Spanish novelists of inserting a "nouvelle into the roman," hence the first-person "Tom Outland's Story" wedged between the other two parts of the novel. Second, she compared the novel's structure to a sonata form in music, with the center section in significant contrast to the surrounding sections Behind the understated prose relating the story of Professor Godfrey St. Peter, who, despite his success, experiences at midcareer a profound disappointment with life, is the fierce account of how he decides to continue living despite those disappointments. Tom Outland's thrilling tale of a long-lost civilization is both an ironic contrast to the professor's staid outer life and a mirror of the imaginative interior life he experiences in his attic study.

James Woodress is a professor emeritus of American literature at the University of California, Davis, and the author of many books, including Willa Cather: A Literary Life (Nebraska 1987). Kari A. Ronning is a research associate for the Willa Cather Project at the University of Nebraska. Frederick M. Link is a professor emeritus of English at the University of Nebraska.

"In an excellent historical essay, James Woodress identifies many sources of the novel. . . . This volume, like its predecessors in the series, is exemplary in its scholarship and the fine art of bookmaking."—Choice “The Professor’s House (1925) is arguably Willa Cather’s most important novel of the 1920s. Thematically, the book is exceptionally far ranging. . . . [It] offers a portrait of conspicuous consumption occasionally reminiscent of Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. . . . An achievement worthy of the masterpiece at its center, the Willa Cather Scholarly Edition of The Professor’s House is a major addition to Cather studies.”—Steven Trout, Great Plains Quarterly “The Professor’s House stands among its author’s most complex and rewarding creations. At 575 pages, the Willa Cather Scholarly Edition of The Professor’s House does full justice to Cather’s richly allusive—and elusive—art. . . . A scholarly tour de force.”—The Michigan Historical Review "Historians as well as Cather scholars will find this new work useful and informative."—The Virginia Quarterly Review
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