Description

Book Synopsis
On October 8, 1871, four decades after its founding, Chicago's destiny was rewritten 'with a pen of fire'. This study considers the mythic proportions of the Great Chicago Fire as the city reshaped its own tragedy into an archetype of the modern struggle against adversity. It attempts to resolve the city's conflicted identity into a unity.

Trade Review
"A very provocative essay on the subject of what might be termed civic belief, those secular myths by which society understands itself... A very thoughtful work that is particularly valuable in these times." -- Thomas Hine, New York Times Book Review ADVANCE PRAISE "A solid mix of scholarship and speculation. Miller has revealed to me a lot I didn't know about the struggle between civic fantasy and architectural ambition that led to the reinvention of Chicago. It's an exemplary modern tale, this careful study of catastrophe and its exploitation." -- Philip Roth "Ross Miller has written a vivid and important piece of Americana, a fine contribution to our social history. I read with pleasure and profit." -- Irving Howe "[Miller's] analysis of the meaning of the Great Fire, and of the crucial decades of rebuilding, is the kind of social/cultural history that can revive your faith in the future of criticism in America." -- Frank McConnell

The Great Chicago Fire

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    A Paperback by Ross Miller

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      View other formats and editions of The Great Chicago Fire by Ross Miller

      Publisher: MO - University of Illinois Press
      Publication Date: 10/12/2000 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780252069147, 978-0252069147
      ISBN10: 0252069145

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      On October 8, 1871, four decades after its founding, Chicago's destiny was rewritten 'with a pen of fire'. This study considers the mythic proportions of the Great Chicago Fire as the city reshaped its own tragedy into an archetype of the modern struggle against adversity. It attempts to resolve the city's conflicted identity into a unity.

      Trade Review
      "A very provocative essay on the subject of what might be termed civic belief, those secular myths by which society understands itself... A very thoughtful work that is particularly valuable in these times." -- Thomas Hine, New York Times Book Review ADVANCE PRAISE "A solid mix of scholarship and speculation. Miller has revealed to me a lot I didn't know about the struggle between civic fantasy and architectural ambition that led to the reinvention of Chicago. It's an exemplary modern tale, this careful study of catastrophe and its exploitation." -- Philip Roth "Ross Miller has written a vivid and important piece of Americana, a fine contribution to our social history. I read with pleasure and profit." -- Irving Howe "[Miller's] analysis of the meaning of the Great Fire, and of the crucial decades of rebuilding, is the kind of social/cultural history that can revive your faith in the future of criticism in America." -- Frank McConnell

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