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Art Museum of Nebraska Art, University of Nebraska at Kearney Red Cloud, Nebraska Post Office Murals by Archie Musick (1941). Photographs and text. The Song of the Lark at the Art Institute of Chicago; the painting by Jules Breton that inspired Cather's novel of the same name. Cather Page at Nebraska Department of Travel and Tourism offers a biography of Cather. Willa Cather. From Domestic Goddess. Four critical essays in the Criticism section. A brief biography as well as a bibliography. Willa Cather Archive, a hypermedia archive sponsored by the University of Nebraska Press and supported by Text Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Willa Cather Home Page from Harvard University (Scott Newstrom) is organized into these categories: Events (no longer updated), Publications, Locations, Quotations, Biography, Other. One of the earliest Cather sites on the Web. "Affair at Grover Station, The" A short story by Willa Cather from the English Department at Mount Royal College Books about Willa Cather: A bibliography. Site created by Scott Newstrom. Hosted by Harvard University Cather Documents at Libraries Site created by Scott Newstrom/ Hosted by Harvard University Cather's Listing in PAL: Perspectives in American Literature, A Research and Reference Guide. Bibliography and Study Questions on "Neighbor Rosicky" and "Old Mrs. Harris" Cather, Willa: Letter to Her Homeroom Class at Allegheny High School, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, On the Occasion of Her Leaving Teaching to Work for McClure's Magazine. Wah Hoo, September 1906. The letter is on this Web site. Cather, Willa: Nebraska National Register Sites in Webster County Photographs and brief descriptions of Cather sites ClassicNotes: Study guides for A Lost Lady and My Ántonia from GradeSaver Commencement Program Continued From Last Week Red Cloud Chief, May 27, 1909. A letter Cather wrote when she could not speak at Red Cloud High School's commencement. Masterpiece Theatre's American Collection. Cather Links (with site evaluations), Introduction, Full text of The Song of the Lark, Teacher Resources (critical essays), Lesson Plans, and Writer's Workshop "Old Mrs. Harris" Teaching guide for Cather's short story, originally published in 1932. Superstition Vs. Investigation. Willa Cather's High School Graduation Speech, Opera House, Red Cloud, 1890 "Wagner Matinee, A" Cather's short story. The site contains these sections: Synopsis, Literary Interpretations, Historical and Literary Contexts, Further Reading, Biography, and Lesson Plans. From the Scribbling Women group which, as they write, "...dramatizes stories by American women writers for national radio broadcast. This site provides classroom resources for teaching and learning the rich tradition of American literature by women." Willa Cather. From Domestic Goddess. Four critical essays in the Criticism section. A brief biography as well as a bibliography. Willa Cather Archive, a hypermedia archive sponsored by the University of Nebraska Press and supported by Text Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. This important Cather site is under development. At present it contains Willa Cather Home Page from Harvard University (Scott Newstrom) is organized into these categories: Events (no longer updated), Publications, Locations, Quotations, Biography, Other. One of the earliest Cather sites on the Web. Willa Cather Talks of Work: An interview by F. H. in the Philadelphia Record, August 10, 1913, soon after the publication of O Pioneers!.The interview is on this Web site. Willa Sibert Cather, an interview by Latrobe Carroll, Bookman, May 3, 1921. The interview is on this Web site. Every Man a King, by Harvey Newbranch Omaha World-Herald, November 1921. Newbranch, a classmate of Cather at the University of Nebraska, and editor of the Omaha World-Herald, responds to a lecture tour by Cather with Transcendentalist fervor. The article is on this Web site. Language and Being in Cather's The Professors House: A Look Back and Forth from Thoreau to Nietzsche and Heidegger. An Essay by Frank H. W. Edler LOST! A Lady. FOUND! An Artist.. An essay by Malcolm Cowley [from Brentano's "Book Chat," March- April 1926; a bookstore's free magazine]. Site created by Scott Newstrom. Hosted by Harvard University My Ántonia. A brief discussion of the novel from "Woman: Her American Experience" by Maureen C. Howard. Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute "My Ántonia: A Study of Critical Attitudes." A scholarly essay by Kim Wells "Paul's Case": Next on the Docket: Defended by Willa Cather, the (Hopefully Honorable Judge Paul R. Bixeby, Jr. Presiding) People in America #1773...Willa Cather. Byline Richard Thorman Willa Cather's My Ántonia: "The Happiness and the Curse," an essay by Carol Leavitt Altieri. Teacher materials, student reading list, reading guide, etc. Willa Cather's "Night Express," by Lisa Molinelli. from April Twilights. The Online Archive of Nineteenth-Century Women's Writings. Ed. Glynis Carr. Online. Internet. Posted: Fall 1999. "Willa Cather's Red Cloud, Nebraska," by Meghan Daum. Text and audio of this feature from The Savvy Traveler , the radio program on public radio. Cather Coloring Page From the Nebraska State Historical Society Cather Garden The, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Botanical Garden and Arboretum Orbit Simulation, Asteroid 14969 Willacather (1997 QC1)From NASA and JPL "Pioneers! O Pioneers!" --from Walt Whitman's~Leaves of Grass, the poem from which Cather took the title of her novel, O Pioneers! "Willa Cather has asteroid named for her." AP item posted October 19, 2000 Willa Cather's Obituary from Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph, April 25, 1947.Site created by Scott Newstrom. Hosted by Harvard University "Blind" John William Boone, The HeritageFoundation. This site provides information about one possible model for Blind d'Arnault in the novel My Ántonia. "Blind Tom" with pianist John Davis and writer John Seawright. From Performance Today, National Public Radio. A 24-minute program and an essay about Blind Tom, a prototype of Blind d'Arnault in My Ántonia. Order a transcript and/or audio cassette. Blind Tom. Archangels Unaware: The Story of Thomas Bethune also known as Thomas Wiggins also known as "Blind Tom" (1849 - 1908) by Barbara Schmidt. This site contains photographs and links to other Blind Tom material. Blind Tom, Singing.The Southern Workman. A poem by James D. Carruthers. Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute Hampton, VA. May 1901. Blind Tom performed in Red Cloud while Willa Cather lived there; he served as a possible model for Blind d'Arnault in the novel. Northern Great Plains, 1880-1920. Photographs from the Fred Hulstrand and F. A. Pazandak Photograph Collections. From the Institute for Regional Studies at North Dakota State University North Side: Willa Cather. This site, outlining Cather's Pittsburgh era, is part of site dedicated to Pittsburgh neighborhoods Red Cloud Chamber of Commerce Red Cloud Historical Marker Text Red Cloud Centennial Commission, Nebraska State Historical Society, U.S. 281, Red Cloud, Webster County, Marker 108 "Red Cloud, Webster County," By Ann E. Billesbach, Willa Cather Historical Center, Box 326, Red Cloud, NE 68970 (1988) "Slow Death in the Great Plains," by Harlow A. Hyde. Atlantic Monthly, June, 1997. Shrinking population in the Great Plains Weather Forecast for Red Cloud "Willa Cather Has Frederick Roots That Spread Worldwide," by J. Paul Sandefur, The Winchester Star, January 1, 2000 Willa Cather Memorial Prairie. The text of the historical marker at this Nature Conservancy site six miles south of Red Cloud Willa Cather's Grave in Jaffrey Center, New Hampshire-- photograph Death of the Dream: Farmhouses in the Heartland, PBS program notes. Contains these sections: Film and More, Homes on the Prairie, Literary Connection, Virtual Farmhouse, A Sustainable Future, Resources Willa Cather Conference at Mesa Verde, Colorado. This site is a personal account of this conference held on October 20-24. Links to various Cather, Mesa Verde, and native peoples sites. Some maps and photographs of people and places. |
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