Great American Novel

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File:Edwin Longsden Long - Uncle Tom and Little Eva.JPG
Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) by Harriet Beecher Stowe is commonly cited as the Great American Novel—John William De Forest saw it as the closest possible novel.

The "Great American Novel" (sometimes abbreviated as GAN) is the term for a canonical novel that generally embodies and examines the essence and character of the United States. The term was coined by John William De Forest in an 1868 essay and later shortened to GAN. De Forest noted that the Great American Novel had most likely not been written yet.

Practically, the term refers to a small number of books that have historically been the nexus of discussion, including Moby-Dick (1851), Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), The Great Gatsby (1925), and several others. Exactly what novel or novels warrant the title is without consensus and an assortment have been contended as the idea has evolved and continued into the modern age, with fluctuations in popular and critical regard. William Carlos Williams, Clyde Brion Davis and Philip Roth have all written novels about the Great American Novel—titled as such—with Roth's in the 1970s, a time of great interest in the concept.

Equivalents to and interpretations of the Great American Novel have arisen. Writers and academics have commented upon the term's pragmatics, the different types of novels befitting of title and the idea's relation to race and gender.

History

Background and origin of the term

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The development of American literature coincided with the nation's development, especially of its identity.[1] Calls for an "autonomous national literature" first appeared during the American Revolution,[2] and, by the mid-19th century, the possibility of American literature exceeding its European counterparts began to take shape, as did that of the Great American Novel, this time being the genesis of novels that would later be considered the Great American Novel.[3][4][5]

The term "Great American Novel" originated in an 1868 essay by American Civil War novelist John William De Forest. De Forest saw it serving as a "tableau" of American society,[6] and said that the novel would "paint the American soul" and capture "the ordinary emotions and manners of American existence".[7] Similarly, Daniel Pierce Thompson said it had to be distinctly American.[8] Although De Forest espoused praise and critique for contemporaneous novels, he ultimately concluded that the Great American Novel had yet to be written.[4][9] The essay's publication coincided with the rising prestige of the novel. Previously, only five percent of American books were marked as novels, with most fictional works given the self-effacing title of a "tale".[10] In 1880, writer Henry James simplified the term with the initialism "GAN".[7]

Development

The term soon became popular, its ubiquity considered a cliché and disparaged by literary critics.[11] Lawrence Buell stated that the concept was seen as a part of a larger national, cultural and political consolidation.[12] According to JSTOR Daily's Grant Shreve, as the concept grew, concrete criteria for the Great American Novel developed:

  • It must encompass the entire nation and not be too consumed with a particular region.
  • It must be democratic in spirit and form.
  • Its author must have been born in the United States or have adopted the country as his or her own.
  • Its true cultural worth must not be recognized upon its publication.

Additionally, Shreve states, referencing Buell, that "several 'templates' or 'recipes' for the Great American Novel emerged.Script error: No such module "String".... Recipe 1 is to write a novel that is 'subjected to a series of memorable rewritings.'Script error: No such module "String".... Recipe 2 is what Buell calls 'the romance of the divide.' Novels of this kindScript error: No such module "String".... imagine national (and geographic) rifts in the 'form of a family history and/or heterosexual love affair.'Script error: No such module "String".... Recipe 3, a 'narrative centering on the lifeline of a socially paradigmatic figureScript error: No such module "String".... whose odyssey tilts on the one side toward picaresque and on the other toward a saga of personal transformation, or failure of such.'"[4]

From the turn of the century to the mid-twentieth century, the idea eluded serious academic consideration, being dismissed as a "naively amateurish age-of-realism pipe dream" not aligned with the culture of that time.[13][14][3] Writers such as William Dean Howells and Mark Twain were equally blasé. Frank Norris too saw the concept as not befitting the time, stating that the fact of a great work being American should be incidental.[14] Edith Wharton complained that the Great American Novel concept held a narrow view of the nation, simply being concerned with "Main Street".[14] At this time, it also grew to become associated with masculine values.[15]

A cover the Roth's novel reading "The Great American Novel"
Philip Roth satirized the term with his 1973 novel The Great American Novel.

Despite this critical disregard, many writers, prepped with "templates" and "recipes" for the matter, sought to create the next Great American Novel; Upton Sinclair and Sinclair Lewis both sought to create the Great American Novel with The Jungle (1906) and Babbit (1924), respectively.[16][4] William Carlos Williams and Clyde Brion Davis released satirical explorations both entitled The Great American Novel – Philip Roth would later release a novel of the same name.[14][17][18] Bernard F. Jr. Rogers said that Kurt Vonnegut's "entire career might be characterised as an attempt to produce something like 'the GAN,' but of its own time".[3] The 1970s saw a general resurgence of the concept, with The New York Times using the phrase the most in their history, a total of 71 times.[19]Template:Efn The revival was perhaps the result of social change and related anxieties and the pursuit of a plateau between them.[19]

In the 21st century, retaining its contention and derision, the concept has moved towards a more populist attitude, functioning as "catnip for a listicle-obsessed internet".[4][20][21]Template:Efn Adam Kirsch noted that books such as Roth's American Pastoral (1997) indicate that writers are still interested in creating the Great American Novel.[22] Commenting upon the Great American Novel's place in the 21st century, Stephens Shapiro said that "Maybe the GAN is a theme that rises in interest when the existing world system is amidst transformation, as America's greatness of all kinds swiftly fades away."[5] When asked in a 2004 interview if the Great American Novel could be written, Norman Mailer—who had long been interested in the idea[23]—said it could not, for the United States had become too developed of a nation.[24] Tony Tulathimutte similarly dismissed it as "a comforting romantic myth, which wrongly assumes that commonality is more significant than individuality".[25]

Analysis

Racial and gender commentary

Multiple commentators have noted the concept's relation to racial and national identity, be it influence from by large-scale immigration, which brought forth authors closely aligned with the Great American Novel or novels detailing marginalized peoples, some furthermore trying to "bridge the racial divide".[20][26][22] Commenting upon the idea's racial aspects and presence in popular consciousness, Hugh Kenner wrote in a 1953 issue of Perspective that:

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The lad who was going to produce 'The Great American Novel' as soon as he had gotten his mind around his adolescent experience is part of the folklore of the 'twenties, and the prevalence of this myth documents the awareness of the young American of thirty years ago that the consciousness of his race remained uncreated.[14]

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Perrin, Andrew Hoberek and Barbara Probst Solomon all noted that the '70s saw Jews pursue the GAN. Perrin said it was a boom decade for, what Hoberek called, the "Jewish GAN". Solomon was by 1972 sick of "nice Jewish sons who are writing the GAN". Aaron Latham, in a 1971 article, highlighted Roth and Mailer as Jews who wanted to the write the next GJN and GAN, respectively.[19]

The Great American Novel's relation to masculinity was seen as a problem by female writers. Gertrude Stein once lamented that, as a lesbian Jewish woman, she would be unable to compose the Great American Novel. Joyce Carol Oates similarly felt that "a woman could write it, but then it wouldn't be the GAN".[15] Viet Thanh Nguyen said that "[o]ne of the unspoken silences of the Great American Novel is the assumption that it can only be written by white men".[27] Laura Miller wrote, in a Salon article, that "The presumption and the belligerence embodied in this ideal have put off many American women writers". She also noted that many characters in Great American Novel candidates are male: "the notion that a female figure might serve the same purpose undermines the very concept of the Great American Novel".[23] Although British analyst Faye Hammill noted that Gentlemen Prefer Blondes by Anita Loos, was one of the few that 'doesn't stink'.[28] Emily Temple of Literary Hub suggested that if the protagonist of Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar (1963) were male it would likely be considered more seriously as a Great American Novel contender.[29]

Interpretations

There are several different interpretations of what makes a Great American Novel. Some say that it depicts a diverse group facing issues representative of "epoch-defining public events or crises."[7] John Scalzi felt that for a novel to be the Great American Novel it had to be ubiquitous and notable, and analyze the United States through a moral context.[30] De Forest similarly saw the Great American Novel as having to capture the "essence" of America, its quality irrelevant.[31] Norris considered the musings upon what made a novel "great" and/or "American" to showcase patriotic insecurity.[14] Mohsin Hamid echoed the idea that the GAN is indicative of insecurity, connecting it to a "colonial legacy".[32]

Commentators have said that the concept is exclusively American in nature.[31] Journalist John Walsh offered a national equal in the form of Russian writer Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace (1869); Buell felt that Australia was the only country to replicate America's search.[20][5]Template:Efn Scholes said that the Great American Novel has always been thought of adjacent to European literature.[20] David Vann was of the belief that they had to be "anti-American".[33] Rogers felt that it does not need to have American protagonists or be set in the United States and should not espouse patriotism or nationalism.[3]

Buell identifies multiple types of Great American Novels. First is one who is subject to mysticism and stands the test of time.[34] The second is "the romance of the divide", which imagines national rifts in the "form of a family history and/or heterosexual love affair"—race often plays a role.[4][34] The third variety encapsulates the American Dream and see its protagonist rise from obscurity.[19] Fourthly, novels which are composed of a diverse cast of characters "imagined as social microcosms or vanguards" and who are placed with events and crises that serve to "constitute an image of 'democratic' promise or dysfunction". Buell also said speculative science fiction may be the basis for a possible fifth archetype.[5]

Kasia Boddy wrote that, "[s]ince its initial formulation", the concept "has always been more about inspiration than achievement; the very fact that it has been attempted but remains 'unwritten' providing a spur to future engagement with both nation and national literature".[15] Speculating on De Forest's intentions when devising the notion of the Great American Novel and commenting upon its development, Cheryl Strayed wrote that:

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De Forest was arguing in hopes of not one Great American Novel, but rather the development of a literary canon that accurately portrayed our complex national character, has been lost on many, as generation after generation of critics have since engaged in discussions of who might have written the Great American Novel of any given age, and writers have aspired to be the one chosen — a competitive mode that is, I suppose, as American as it gets. It's also most likely the reason that the idea has persisted for so long. To think that one might be writing the Great American Novel, as opposed to laboring through a meandering 400-page manuscript...is awfully reassuring. I have a purpose! I am writing the Great American Novel![18]

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Denoting an apocryphal state, film critic A. O. Scott compared the GAN to the Yeti, the Loch Ness monster and the Sasquatch.[35]

Notable candidates

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Template:Sronly
Year Cover or
title page
Novel Portrait Author Commentary Ref.
1826 File:The Last of the Mohicans 1826.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A drawn portrait of James Fenimore Cooper, based on a photograph Script error: No such module "sort". Although John William De Forest critiqued Cooper's writing as boring, many consider The Last of the Mohicans to be the first GAN. It was influential in defining American literature and addresses themes which are common in later American works, including rugged individualism and freedom. [36][37]
1850 File:Title page for The Scarlet Letter.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A black-and-white photograph of Nathaniel Hawthorne, bearing a mustache and medium-length hair Script error: No such module "sort". Although John William De Forest thought The Scarlet Letter unworthy of the label of GAN, it is now widely included on most lists.[38] Lawrence Buell recognized it as a "reluctant master text"—his first GAN script.[34] [39][40]
1851 File:Moby-Dick FE title page.jpg Moby-Dick A photograph of Herman Melville seated at a chair, arms crossed and sporting combed-back hair and a blocky beard Script error: No such module "sort". According to Hester Blum of Penn State University, "What makes Moby-Dick the Greatest American Novel, in other words, is that Melville can invoke the preposterous image of a sobbing, heart-stricken moose and we think, yes, I have come to know exactly what that sounds like, and I know what world of meaning is contained within that terrific sound".[41] [12][22]
1852 File:UncleTomsCabinCover.jpg Uncle Tom's Cabin A photograph of a seated Harriet Beecher Stowe, wearing a dress and a shawl Script error: No such module "sort". Lawrence Buell claimed it to be the first novel to receive the acclaim of the GAN and that it was widely accepted that it was 'nearest approach to the desired phenomenon'.[15][42] John William De Forest noted it as the only possible contender and as "a picture of American life".[9] [43]
1868 File:Houghton AC85.Aℓ194L.1869 pt.2aa - Little Women, title.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A hazy photograph of Louisa May Alcott, with dark hair wearing a dress Script error: No such module "sort". According to Marlowe Daly-Galeano, what makes Little Women "such an amazing novel [and possible contender for the GAN] is that it gives women's voices and women's stories the prime position in a way that...[was] very new and fresh to readers in the...late 1860s," and suggests that the "strongest mark of Little WomenTemplate:'s influence" lies in subsequent stories told about "circles of women" and "cool girl protagonists" which all seem to have a "direct link" to Little Women. Gregory Eiselein remarks that several aspects of Little Women (its inclusion of colloquialisms and grammatical errors in its dialogue, the familiarity of the March girls' struggles, etc.) make it "one of the founding documents of American literary realism." [44]
1884 File:Huckleberry Finn book.JPG Adventures of Huckleberry Finn A hazy photograph of Mark Twain, with white hair and mustache in a light-colored suit Script error: No such module "sort". The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn was one of the first American novels to utilize a regional vernacular.[45] In 1935, Ernest Hemingway stated that "All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called 'Huckleberry Finn'."[46] William van O'Connor wrote, in a 1955 issue of College English, that "we are informed, from a variety of critical positions, that [it] is the truly American novel".[47] [48][49][41]
1895 File:TheRedBadgeOfCourage.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A photograph Stephen Crane in a suit, with parted hair and a mustache Script error: No such module "sort". Crane was among the earliest generation of American novelists to be influenced by John William De Forest and consciously strove to produce a "National Novel".[50] Critic Robert Barr had named him the "most likely to produce the great American novel" only two years before Crane died suddenly at the age of 28.[51] According to Yale professor of literature Jay Martin, Crane's war novel The Red Badge of Courage, set during the Civil War, "marks the culmination of the Great American Novel".[52] [52]
1925 File:The Great Gatsby Cover 1925 Retouched.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A photograph of F. Scott Fitzgerald with a slight smile and parted, slicked-back hair Script error: No such module "sort". Emory Elliott wrote, in 1991, that it is "still frequently nominated as the GAN".[53] Kirsch, in 2013, said it to be "one of the first titles to come to mind whenever the Great American Novel is mentioned".[22] Deirdre Donahue of USA Today and Fitzgerald scholar James L. W. West III felt that its "embodiment of the American spirit", relevance and prose were the reasons as to why it's the GAN.[54] [55][56][57]
1925 File:Gentlemen Prefer Blondes Cover 1926 Restored.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A photograph of Anita Loos, wearing a fur-lined dress and a large dress hat Script error: No such module "sort". Edith Wharton and Frank Crowninshield proclaimed the novel to be the GAN.[58][28] [58][28]
1936 File:Absalom, Absalom! (1936 1st ed cover).jpg Absalom, Absalom! A photograph of William Faulkner in a suit and with a mustached, reclined against a brick wall Script error: No such module "sort". Absalom, Absalom! has been said to represent Lawrence Buell's "romance of the divide".[22] [59][22]
1939 File:The Grapes of Wrath (1939 1st ed cover).jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A photo of John Steinbeck. His hair is slicked-back and closely shaved on the sides. He has a mustache and facial hair on his chin. Script error: No such module "sort". Jay Parini identified it as "a great American novel" due to its focus on United States during a crisis and the eclectic depiction of American life. Richard Rodriguez, similarly, felt that it was "the great American novel that everyone keeps waiting for" because of how it showed "the losers in America".[60] Bill Kauffman declared it one of three possible candidates for the GAN.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". [60][61]
1951 File:The Catcher in the Rye (1951, first edition cover).jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A photograph of J.D. Salinger, wearing a suit and sporting dark, combed hair Script error: No such module "sort". The Catcher in the Rye is an example of a writer setting out to write the GAN and receiving such praise.[62] [63][62]
1952 File:Invisible Man (1952 1st ed jacket cover).jpg Invisible Man Ralph Ellison is pictured sitting in a chair before a bookcase. He is wearing a suit and has a mustache and receding hair-line. Script error: No such module "sort". Joseph Fruscione said that Invisible Man was the GAN because it can be "many things to many readers".[41] [64][65]
1953 File:The Adventures of Augie March Cover.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". A photograph of Saul Bellow with an open book before a bookcase. He is wearing a suit and has somewhat curly hair. Script error: No such module "sort". Martin Amis thought that The Adventures of Augie March was the GAN because of its "fantastic inclusiveness, its pluralism, its qualmless promiscuity".[29] [20][66]
1955 File:Lolita 1955.JPG Lolita A photograph of Vladimir Nabokov. Wearing a collared shirt, Nabokov is pictured in his later years, with aging skin and white hair. Script error: No such module "sort". Mary Elizabeth Williams called Lolita the GAN because of its prose and says "'Lolita' forever remains a thing of timeless beauty."[41] [41][67]
1960 File:To Kill a Mockingbird (first edition cover).jpg To Kill a Mockingbird A photograph of Harper Lee in an outdoor setting. She has short hair and appears to be examining something in the sand and grass. Script error: No such module "sort". John Scalzi calls it a GAN in that it is a notable and ubiquitous work that also deals with morality and the American experience.[30] Oprah Winfrey described it as "our national novel."[68] [69][30]
1973 The silhouette of a row of buildings is situated at the bottom of this bright orange cover. "Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon" is printed in bold text in the center. Gravity's Rainbow File:Thomas Pynchon, Navy Sailor.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". Pynchon's postmodern novel of World War II is commonly cited as "the most important American novel" of the post-war era.[70] It has been said to conform to Buell's fourth type of GAN.[19] [71]

[72][73]

1985 File:Blood Meridian (1985 1st ed half title page).jpg Blood Meridian A title page reading "Blood Meridian or The Evening Redness in the West" with the author's name, "Cormac McCarthy", positioned below the title. Script error: No such module "sort". David Vann felt that Blood Meridian was a GAN because it explored the United States’ genocide of Native American people.[33] William Dalrymple states "this book [is] the Great American Novel. It's a beautifully written, dark, bleak western—but unlike any western I'd ever known."[74] [74][33]
1987 File:Beloved (1987 1st ed dust jacket cover).jpg Beloved Toni Morrison is pictured in a turtle-neck. She is sporting an afro. Script error: No such module "sort". The novel is noted for its depiction of the psychological effects of slavery and racism. When Beloved topped a poll seeking "the best work of American fiction" published from 1980 to 2005, A. O. Scott remarked that "Any other outcome would have been startling, since Morrison's novel has inserted itself into the American canon more completely than any of its potential rivals."[35] Beloved has been noted to align with Buell's third type of GAN.[19] [35][75]
1991 File:American Psycho Title.jpg American Psycho Bret Easton Ellis is pictured standing on front of a stone wall and greenery. He is wearing a blazer over a blue collared shirt and has a lanyard on his neck. Script error: No such module "sort". Julia Keller saw the novel's inclusion of "brand names and sex and social anxiety" as part of the reason why it is the GAN.[76] [76][77]
1996 File:Infinite Jest 2.jpg Infinite Jest David Foster Wallace is pictured with shoulder-length hair and a short beard. Wearing frameless glasses, he is speaking at a microphone and is wearing a black denim jacket over a t-shirt. Script error: No such module "sort". Lawrence Buell noted that "For an appreciable number of turn-of-the-twenty-first-century readers...Infinite Jest [is] the GAN of our days".[78] [78][29]
1997 File:Underworld 4.jpg Underworld An elderly and spectacled Don DeLillo is pictured reading from paper at a microphone. He is wearing a sweater over a collared shirt. Script error: No such module "sort". According to Robert McCrum, it developed a reputation as the GAN almost immediately after its publication.[79] [20][79][80]
2010 File:Freedom (2010 title page, signed by Jonathan Franzen).jpg Freedom A spectacled Jonathan Franzen is pictured in a tuxedo on a Time magazine red carpet. His short hair is somewhat untidy. Script error: No such module "sort". Lawrence Buell described it as the "most widely acclaimed GAN contender...post-9/11".[16] [81][20]
2012 File:Telegraph Avenue 2.jpg Telegraph Avenue Michael Chabon is pictured wearing glasses, shoulder-length hair and a beard. Speaking at a microphone, his collared shirt is decorated with celestial bodies. Script error: No such module "sort". John Freeman, of the Boston Globe, praised Chabon for "imagining the Great American Novel with a multiracial cast."[82] [83][84]
2013 File:The Goldfinch cover page signed by Donna Tartt.png The Goldfinch File:Donna Tartt.jpg Script error: No such module "sort". Described by Randy Boyagoda as "exactly what comes to mind when you think of the Great American Novel: sprawling, smart, of-the-moment in its plot, and above all else, unabashedly swaggering in its presumption that you’ll want to spend eight hundred pages following Theo, its hero, as he makes his way through loud and crazy America."[85] [86]

[87]

See also

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Notes and references

Notes

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Citations

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  1. Baym, Nina, ed. The Norton Anthology of American Literature. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2007. Print.
  2. Buell (2014), p. 25.
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  6. Buell (2014), p. 24.
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  10. Buell (2014), pp. 24—25.
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  16. a b Buell (2014), pp. 3—4.
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  21. Buell (2014), pp. 5,9.
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  28. a b c "One of the few books that doesn't stink': The Intellectuals, the Masses and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" by Faye Hammill. Critical Survey. Vol. 17, No. 3. 2005. Accessed March 24, 2021.
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  42. Buell (2014), p. 4.
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  50. Martin (1967), p. 55.
  51. Martin (1967), p. 56, fn. 68.
  52. a b Martin (1967), p. 35.
  53. Emory Elliott et al. (eds.) (1991). The Columbia History of the American Novel Template:Webarchive. Columbia University Press. p. 323. "The Great Gatsby (1925), a work still frequently nominated as 'the great American novel' ..."
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  61. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Nixon quotes John Springer, author of The Fondas (Citadel, 1973), a book about Henry Fonda and his role in film version of The Grapes of Wrath: "The Great American Novel made one of the few enduring Great American Motion Pictures."
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  69. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". (Lee has since published a sequel, Go Set a Watchman.)
  70. Buell (2014), p. 426.
  71. Buell (2014), pp. 426—427.
  72. Weisenburger (2006), pp 1—2.
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  75. Buell (2014), pp. 317—348.
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  78. a b Buell (2014), p. 57.
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Works cited

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Further reading

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External links

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