**The Society for the Study of Rebecca Harding Davis and Her World**
About Rebecca Harding Davis
A Brief Biography


The Society:

About the Davis Society
By-Laws
Membership Form
Officers


Scholarship:

Davis Newsletters
Conferences
Primary Bibliography

Secondary Bibliography

Other Resources:

The Western Pennsylvania Women Writers Center

Affiliated Organizations:

American Literature Association
Society for the Study of American Women Writers


Rebecca Harding Davis Society
English/Communications Department
c/o Robin Cadwallader
311 Scotus Hall
Loretto, Pa 15940-0600
814-472-3342
Email


Rebecca Harding Davis Portrait

Rebecca Harding Davis (1831-1910) was one of the United States’ premier writers from the 1860s until her death in 1910.  While Davis is accurately recognized as a pioneering realist, she also engaged in an impressive range of other literary styles—including romanticism, folklore, and the gothic—to convey her analyses of American culture.  After gaining national stature with her first major publication, “Life in the Iron-Mills” (Atlantic Monthly, April 1861), Davis went on to publish ten novels and a collection of short stories in book form, an additional sixteen serialized novels, hundreds of short stories and essays for adults, more than a hundred short stories for juveniles, and a memoir.  Davis’s writings addressed major political and social events of the nineteenth century—the relationship of capitalists and laborers, the Civil War, Reconstruction, changing social roles for women, US imperialism, and especially the lives of “everyday men and women.”

                                          Sharon M. Harris
                                          University of Connecticut, Storrs







Calls for Papers

Please submit calls for papers to RCadwallader@francis.edu