Frank Merriwells Frolics PDF Download

Are you looking for read ebook online? Search for your book and save it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Download Frank Merriwells Frolics PDF full book. Access full book title Frank Merriwells Frolics.

Frank Merriwell's Party

Frank Merriwell's Party
Author: Burt L. Standish
Publisher:
Total Pages: 286
Release: 1903
Genre:
ISBN:

Download Frank Merriwell's Party Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle


Frank Merriwell's Trip West

Frank Merriwell's Trip West
Author: Burt L. Standish
Publisher:
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1924
Genre: Adventure stories, American
ISBN:

Download Frank Merriwell's Trip West Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle


Frank Merriwell and the Fiction of All-American Boyhood

Frank Merriwell and the Fiction of All-American Boyhood
Author: Ryan K. Anderson
Publisher: University of Arkansas Press
Total Pages: 319
Release: 2015-09-09
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1557286825

Download Frank Merriwell and the Fiction of All-American Boyhood Book in PDF, ePub and Kindle

Gilbert Patten, writing as Burt L. Standish, made a career of generating serialized twenty-thousand-word stories featuring his fictional creation Frank Merriwell, a student athlete at Yale University who inspired others to emulate his example of manly boyhood. Patten and his publisher, Street and Smith, initially had only a general idea about what would constitute Merriwell’s adventures and who would want to read about them when they introduced the hero in the dime novel Tip Top Weekly in 1896, but over the years what took shape was a story line that capitalized on middle-class fears about the insidious influence of modern life on the nation’s boys. Merriwell came to symbolize the Progressive Era debate about how sport and school made boys into men. The saga featured the attractive Merriwell distinguishing between “good” and “bad” girls and focused on his squeaky-clean adventures in physical development and mentorship. By the serial’s conclusion, Merriwell had opened a school for “weak and wayward boys” that made him into a figure who taught readers how to approximate his example. In Frank Merriwell and the Fiction of All-American Boyhood, Anderson treats Tip Top Weekly as a historical artifact, supplementing his reading of its text, illustrations, reader letters, and advertisements with his use of editorial correspondence, memoirs, trade journals, and legal documents. Anderson blends social and cultural history, with the history of business, gender, and sport, along with a general examination of childhood and youth in this fascinating study of how a fictional character was used to promote a homogeneous “normal” American boyhood rooted in an assumed pecking order of class, race, and gender.