Donna M. Campbell Prof Eng Washington SU Commons username: @campbedm Twitter handle: dmcampbellwsu ORCID iD: 0000-0003-3432-9093 hub.wsu.edu/campbell Following 28 members ViewActivityProfileSites 1CORE deposits 7Following 28Followers 35Groups 13DiscussionsDocsAcademic InterestsAmerican literatureDigital humanitiesEdith WhartonFilmJack LondonNaturalismRegionalismWomen writersCommons GroupsMLA#TransformDH2018 MLA Convention2019 MLA ConventionComputer Studies in Language and LiteratureDelegate AssemblyDigital HumanitiesDLS AnthologyLLC 19th-Century AmericanLLC 20th- and 21st-Century AmericanLLC Late-19th- and Early-20th-Century AmericanMS Screen Arts and CultureTC Digital HumanitiesTC Women’s and Gender StudiesRecent Commons Activity joined the group 2019 MLA Convention joined the group 2018 MLA Convention deposited Edith Wharton and the ‘Auth…AboutAll articles are available at the WSU Research Exchange, https://research.libraries.wsu.edu:8443/xmlui/handle/2376/5613 See an updated list of articles here: https://hub.wsu.edu/campbell/cv/. If you don’t have access and want an article, email me (campbelld@wsu.edu) or DM me on Twitter (@dmcampbellwsu) and I’ll send it to you. 19th- and early 20th-century American lit, regionalism and naturalism, women writers, digital humanities, early filmWork Shared in COREArticlesEdith Wharton and the ‘Authoresses’: The Critique of Local Color in Wharton’s Early Fiction“Have you read my ‘Christ’ story?”: Mary Austin’s The Man Jesus and London’s The Star RoverMore than a Family Resemblance? Agnes Crane’s “A Victorious Defeat” and Stephen Crane’s The Third Violet1 A Forgotten Daughter of Bohemia: Gertrude Christian Fosdick’s Out of Bohemia and the Artists’ Novel of the 1890sA literary Expatriate: Hamlin Garland, Edith Wharton, and the Politics of a Literary Reputation Edith Wharton’s “Book of the Grotesque”: Sherwood Anderson, Modernism, and the Late StoriesEdith Wharton and the ‘Authoresses’: The Critique of Local Color in Wharton’s Early Fiction