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Sherwood anderson winesburg5/24/2023 ![]() “Winesburg” quickly became a cultural byword, a metaphor for the yawning emptiness of rural life. They were, the writer believed, casualties of a close-minded culture, condemned to live out a lonely, alienated existence. ![]() These “grotesques,” as Anderson called them, had allowed doubt and fear to overwhelm their better instincts. Drawing on his own experience growing up in the agricultural hamlet of Clyde, Ohio, he breathed life into a band of neurotic castaways adrift on the flatlands of the Midwest, each of them in their own way struggling - and failing - to locate meaning, personal connection and love amid the town’s elm-shaded streets. ![]() In the autumn of 1915, while living in a bohemian boardinghouse on Chicago’s Near North Side, Sherwood Anderson began work on a collection of tales describing the tortured lives of the inhabitants of Winesburg, a fictional Ohio town, in the 1890s. ![]()
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