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25 pages 50 minutes read

A Dark Brown Dog

Fiction | Short Story | Middle Grade | Published in 1901

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Background

Literary Context: Realism and Naturalism

Stephen Crane was an American poet and novelist known for his work within the movements of Realism and, in particular, Naturalism. Realism emerged in part as a reaction to Romanticism. While Romanticism tended to depict dramatized events and showcase the author’s imagination, realism focused on everyday settings and life, seeking to represent familiar characters with authenticity. Realists asserted that “truth telling” was the highest form of written art. Naturalism, a movement closely linked with realism, embraced a sense of determinism that set it apart. Naturalists tend to adopt a detached air in their writing. Their tone is often impersonal, almost scientific, suggesting the sense that the universe is indifferent to the fate of the characters. Crane was among the pioneers of Naturalism, which spanned from the 1880s to the 1930s, often exploring the influence of a person’s physical, social, economic, and cultural environment on the development of their personhood.

 

Though the story “A Dark Brown Dog” is allegorical, it is, on the surface, a mundane story of a child and a stray dog. There is nothing fantastical, supernatural, or particularly unique about the characters and their struggles.

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