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  1. www.encyclopedia.com › american-literature-biographies › sinclair-lewisSinclair Lewis - Encyclopedia.com

    May 29, 2018 · Sinclair Lewis (1885 – 1951) was one of the leading U.S. novelists of the 1920s. He was a social critic of the era who wrote from the political perspective of Progressivism. Lewis wrote some of the most effective mass-market criticism against the business corruption of society.

  2. Lewis, Sinclair (1885-1951) Born in 1885 in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, Sinclair Lewis would become one of America's most forceful social critics during the 1920s. After attending Yale, he had held an assortment of editorial and journalistic positions by his mid-twenties, including the dubious honor of selling short-story plots to Jack London.

  3. This crossword clue belongs to CodyCross Casino Group 278 Puzzle 2. The answer we have below for Sinclair Lewis archetype of conformism has a total of 7 letters. HINTS AND TIPS: Before giving away the correct answer, here are some more hints and tips for you to guess the solution on your own! 1. The first letter of the answer is: B. B. 2.

  4. SIDELIGHTS: The grandson of Nobel Laureate Sinclair Lewis, J. P. Sinclair Lewis works in the publishing business and has written historical novels focusing on Buffalo Gordon, a runaway slave who makes a life for himself in the U.S. Army. The first in the series, Buffalo Gordon: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Nate Gordon from Louisiana ...

  5. www.encyclopedia.com › arts › educational-magazinesMain Street - Encyclopedia.com

    Sinclair Lewis: The Man from Main Street is a 1986 videocassette produced by WBGU of Bowling Green, Ohio, and distributed by Ohio Humanities Resource Center. Books on Tape, Inc., produced an audiocassette version of Main Street (slightly edited) in 1987. It is packaged in two parts, each part includes seven cassettes.

  6. Harry Sinclair Lewis, best known as Sinclair Lewis, was born on February 7, 1885, in Sauk Centre, Minnesota. His father was a physician. In 1903, Lewis went to Yale University, where he served as editor of the Yale Literary Magazine.

  7. Ida Tarbell. Born November 5, 1857. Hatch Hallow, Pennsylvania. Died January 6, 1944. Bridgeport, Connecticut. American journalists. "I aimed at the public's heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach." —Upton Sinclair, on the public reaction to his 1906 novel The Jungle. Jacob Riis, Upton Sinclair, Lincoln Steffens, and Ida Tarbell were ...

  8. www.encyclopedia.com › literature-and-arts › literature-englishBabbitt - Encyclopedia.com

    Jun 11, 2018 · by Sinclair Lewis. THE LITERARY WORK. A novel set from 1920 to 1922 in Zenith, an imaginary midwestern American city; published in 1922. SYNOPSIS. Tracing two years in the life of George Babbitt, a self-proclaimed “representative business man,” lewis offers a sharp satire of America’s prosperous white middle-class.

  9. Sinclair Lewis criticized the narrow life of the small town in Main Street (1920), the middle class businessman and middle sized city in Babbit (1922), the medical profession in Arrowsmith (1925), the clergy in Elmer Gantry (1927), and the big business man in Dodsworth (1929). Lewis received the Nobel Prize for fiction in 1926, the first American to do so. In the 1930s his only notable work was

  10. Lewiston, N.Y.,Edwin Mellen Press, 1997. Sinclair, Upton (1878-1968)American novelist Upton Sinclair is most famous for his 1906 novel The Jungle and the reforms to which it gave rise. Sinclair was a muckraker—so dubbed by President Theodore Roosevelt, who regarded them as a nuisance—one of a group of journalists who were relentless in ...