The Red Badge of Courage: An Episode of the American Civil War.
CRANE, Stephen.
The Red Badge of Courage: An Episode of the American Civil War.
"The first artistic approach to the Civil War": Stephen Crane's The Red Badge of Courage
New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1896.
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Item Number: 150788
Early printing of this major work of American fiction. Octavo, original publisher’s tan cloth decorated in red and gilt. In very good condition with rubbing to the extremities.
An abbreviated version of The Red Badge of Courage was first serialized in The Philadelphia Press in December 1894. This version of the story, which was culled to 18,000 words by an editor specifically for the serialization, was reprinted in newspapers across America, establishing Crane's fame. Crane biographer John Berryman wrote that the story was published in at least 200 small city dailies and approximately 550 weekly papers. In October 1895, a version, which was 5,000 words shorter than the original manuscript, was printed in book form by D. Appleton & Company. “Stephen Crane, with no more military experience than his lively imagination could cull from Battles and Leaders of the Civil War and from Tolstoy, told so graphically how a raw recruit feels in battle that The Red Badge of Courage must be regarded as the first artistic approach to the war. It pictures no historical figure or event, except that Chancellorsville is its setting, but its sense of the helplessness and meaninglessness of the common soldier, maneuvered by superiors and circumstance, is a brilliant achievement in impression… Its illusion of authentic experience has made it a minor classic of the war” (Leisy, 158-59).






