In 1922, the Western writer and novelist Owen Wister postulated an interesting thesis: that America's most famous "writers" were not primarily writers at all, not in the way that (for example) Shakespeare was.
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From Molière to America
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In 1922, the Western writer and novelist Owen Wister postulated an interesting thesis: that America's most famous "writers" were not primarily writers at all, not in the way that (for example) Shakespeare was.