The Literature of the Ozarks: An Anthology
ISBN: 9781610756587
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Arkansas Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Ozark Mountains -- Literary collections; American literature -- Ozark Mountains -- History and criticism;

The job of regional literature is twofold: to explore and confront the culture from within, and to help define that culture for outsiders. Taken together, the two centuries of Ozarks literature collected in this ambitious anthology do just that. The fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and drama presented in The Literature of the Ozarks complicate assumptions about backwoods ignorance, debunk the pastoral myth, expand on the meaning of wilderness, and position the Ozarks as a crossroads of human experience with meaningful ties to national literary movements.

Among the authors presented here are an Osage priest, an early explorer from New York, a native-born farm wife, African American writers who protested attacks on their communities, a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, and an art history professor who created a fictional town and a postmodern parody of the region's stereotypes.

The Literature of the Ozarks establishes a canon as nuanced and varied as the region's writers themselves.


Phillip Douglas Howerton is a sixth-generation Ozarker and professor of English at Missouri State University-West Plains. He is co-editor of Cave Region Review , general editor of Elder Mountain: A Journal of Ozarks Studies , and the author of a poetry collection, The History of Tree Roots .
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