The Hoosier Schoolmaster
Illustration from the novel
AuthorEdward Eggleston
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherOrange Judd
Publication date
1871
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages226 pp.
Followed byThe Hoosier Schoolboy (1883) 

The Hoosier Schoolmaster: A Story of Backwoods Life in Indiana is an 1871 novel by the American author Edward Eggleston. The novel originated from a series of stories written for Hearth and Home, a periodical edited by Eggleston,[1] and was based on the experiences of his brother, George Cary Eggleston, who had been a schoolteacher in Indiana.[2] The novel is noted for its realistic depictions of 19th-century American rural life and for its use of local dialect.[3]

Evaluation

In the conclusion to The Hoosier Schoolmaster, Eggleston announces his belief that readers whose taste is not perverted always want a story to “come out well.” Accordingly, he so planned this his first and most important romance that the lovers are all happily united, the poor orphans become prosperous and the evil-doers receive just punishment, mitigated somewhat through the generous intervention of those whom they have wronged. The great popularity The Hoosier Schoolmaster has been ascribed not so much to the conventional plot as to its description of early days in Indiana. It pictures the country school in which custom prescribed a constant warfare between the master and the big boys, the community spelling school, the different forms of bigoted and illiterate preaching that were offered to the new settlers, the amusing attempts at formality in the proceedings of the courts, and other features of pioneer life as the author had seen them in his career as itinerant missionary and agent for a Bible society. Eggleston's fondness for historical accuracy sometimes led him to sacrifice the artistic unity of his story in order to introduce a detail exactly as it was found in real life, but this defect is less noticeable in The Hoosier Schoolmaster than in some of his later novels. There is a great variety of characters who, while they are drawn pretty much in unshaded black and white, have enough truth to human nature to seem real. A sufficient humor pervades the whole, the action never drags, and the book despite its limitations deserved the great vogue it had after its publication in 1871.[4]

Film adaptions

References

  1. Nicholson, Meredith (December 1902). "Edward Eggleston". The Atlantic Monthly. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 90 (542): 804–809. Retrieved June 15, 2010.
  2. King, Levi. "Edward Eggleston". Our Land, Our Literature. Virginia B. Ball Center for Creative Inquiry, Ball State University. Retrieved June 14, 2010.
  3. Underwood, Gary N. (December 1974). "Toward a Reassessment of Edward Eggleston's Literary Dialects". The Bulletin of the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association. Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association. 28 (4): 109–120. doi:10.2307/1346528. JSTOR 1346528.
  4. Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "William B. Cairns" . Encyclopedia Americana.

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