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Beneath the American Renaissance

Author : David S. Reynolds
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 656 pages
File Size : 50,12 MB
Release : 2011-06-01
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0199976406

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The award-winning Beneath the American Renaissance is a classic work on American literature. It immeasurably broadens our knowledge of our most important literary period, as first identified by F.O. Matthiessen's American Renaissance. With its combination of sharp critical insight, engaging observation, and narrative drive, it represents the kind of masterful cultural history for which David Reynolds is known. Here the major works of Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Poe, Hawthorne, Melville, and Dickinson receive striking, original readings set against the rich backdrop of contemporary popular writing. Now back in print, the volume includes a new foreword by historian Sean Wilentz that reveals the book's impact and influence. A magisterial work of criticism and cultural history, Beneath the American Renaissance will fascinate anyone interested in the genesis of America's most significant literary epoch and the iconic figures who defined it.

Above the American Renaissance

Author : Harold Karl Bush
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 17,75 MB
Release : 2018
Category : American literature
ISBN : 9781625343604

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Above the American Renaissance takes David S. Reynolds's classic study Beneath the American Renaissance as a model and a provocation to consider how language and concepts broadly defined as spiritual are essential to understanding nineteenth-century American literary culture. In the 1980s, Reynolds's scholarship and methodology enlivened investigations of religious culture, and since then, for reasons that include a rising respect for interdisciplinarity and the aftershocks of the 9/11 attacks, religion in literature has become a major area of inquiry for Americanists. In essays that reconsider and contextualize Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Herman Melville, Abraham Lincoln, and others, this volume captures the vibrancy of spiritual considerations in American literary studies and points a way forward within literary and spiritual investigations. In addition to the editors and David S. Reynolds, contributors include Jeffrey Bilbro, Dawn Coleman, Jonathan A. Cook, Tracy Fessenden, Zachary Hutchins, Richard Kopley, Mason I. Lowance Jr., John Matteson, Christopher N. Phillips, Vivian Pollak, Michael Robertson, Gail K. Smith, Claudia Stokes, and Timothy Sweet.

Studies in the American Renaissance

Author : Joel Myerson
Publisher : University of Virginia Press
Page : 417 pages
File Size : 46,39 MB
Release : 1986
Category : American literature
ISBN : 9780813910604

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The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the American Renaissance

Author : Christopher N. Phillips
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 276 pages
File Size : 14,60 MB
Release : 2018-03-07
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1108372813

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The American Renaissance has been a foundational concept in American literary history for nearly a century. The phrase connotes a period, as well as an event, an iconic turning point in the growth of a national literature and a canon of texts that would shape American fiction, poetry, and oratory for generations. F. O. Matthiessen coined the term in 1941 to describe the years 1850–1855, which saw the publications of major writings by Hawthorne, Melville, Emerson, Thoreau, and Whitman. This Companion takes up the concept of the American Renaissance and explores its origins, meaning, and longevity. Essays by distinguished scholars move chronologically from the formative reading of American Renaissance authors to the careers of major figures ignored by Matthiessen, including Stowe, Douglass, Harper, and Longfellow. The volume uses the best of current literary studies, from digital humanities to psychoanalytic theory, to illuminate an era that reaches far beyond the Civil War and continues to shape our understanding of American literature.

Native American Renaissance

Author : Kenneth Lincoln
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 352 pages
File Size : 42,90 MB
Release : 1985-12-04
Category : History
ISBN : 9780520054578

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Lincoln presents the writing of today's most gifted Native American authors, against an ethnographic background which should enable a growing number of readers to share his enthusiasm. Lincoln has lived with American Indians, knows them, and is respected by them; all this enhances his book.

American Renaissance

Author : F. O. Matthiessen
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 722 pages
File Size : 36,26 MB
Release : 1968-12-31
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0199726884

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Studies the views of 5 prominent mid-19th century writers on the function and nature of literature and how they applied these views to their works.

The Native American Renaissance

Author : Alan R. Velie
Publisher : University of Oklahoma Press
Page : 377 pages
File Size : 27,48 MB
Release : 2013-11-11
Category : History
ISBN : 0806151315

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The outpouring of Native American literature that followed the publication of N. Scott Momaday’s Pulitzer Prize–winning House Made of Dawn in 1968 continues unabated. Fiction and poetry, autobiography and discursive writing from such writers as James Welch, Gerald Vizenor, and Leslie Marmon Silko constitute what critic Kenneth Lincoln in 1983 termed the Native American Renaissance. This collection of essays takes the measure of that efflorescence. The contributors scrutinize writers from Momaday to Sherman Alexie, analyzing works by Native women, First Nations Canadian writers, postmodernists, and such theorists as Robert Warrior, Jace Weaver, and Craig Womack. Weaver’s own examination of the development of Native literary criticism since 1968 focuses on Native American literary nationalism. Alan R. Velie turns to the achievement of Momaday to examine the ways Native novelists have influenced one another. Post-renaissance and postmodern writers are discussed in company with newer writers such as Gordon Henry, Jr., and D. L. Birchfield. Critical essays discuss the poetry of Simon Ortiz, Kimberly Blaeser, Diane Glancy, Luci Tapahonso, and Ray A. Young Bear, as well as the life writings of Janet Campbell Hale, Carter Revard, and Jim Barnes. An essay on Native drama examines the work of Hanay Geiogamah, the Native American Theater Ensemble, and Spider Woman Theatre. In the volume’s concluding essay, Kenneth Lincoln reflects on the history of the Native American Renaissance up to and beyond his seminal work, and discusses Native literature’s legacy and future. The essays collected here underscore the vitality of Native American literature and the need for debate on theory and ideology.

Manhood and the American Renaissance

Author : David Leverenz
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Page : 387 pages
File Size : 16,22 MB
Release : 2019-06-30
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1501744143

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In the view of David Leverenz, such nineteenth-century American male writers as Emerson, Hawthorne, Melville, Thoreau, and Whitman were influenced more profoundly by the popular model of the entrepreneurial "man of force" than they were by their literary precursors and contemporaries. Drawing on the insights of feminist theory, gender studies, psychoanalytical criticism, and social history, Manhood and the American Renaissance demonstrates that gender pressures and class conflicts played as critical a role in literary creation for the male writers of nineteenth-century America as they did for the women writers. Leverenz interprets male American authors in terms of three major ideologies of manhood linked to the social classes in the Northeast-patrician, artisan, and entrepreneurial. He asserts that the older ideologies of patrician gentility and of artisan independence were being challenged from 1820 to 1860 by the new middle-class ideology of competitive individualism. The male writers of the American Renaissance, patrician almost without exception in their backgrounds and self-expectations, were fascinated yet horrified by the aggressive materialism and the rivalry for dominance they witnessed in the undeferential "new men." In close readings of the works both of well-known male literary figures and of then popular authors such as Richard Henry Dana, Jr., and Francis Parkman, Leverenz discovers a repressed center of manhood beset by fears of humiliation and masochistic fantasies. He discerns different patterns in the works of Whitman, with his artisan's background, and Frederick Douglass, who rose from artisan freedom to entrepreneurial power. Emphasizing the interplay of class and gender, Leverenz also considers how women viewed manhood. He concludes that male writers portrayed manhood as a rivalry for dominance, but contemporary female writers saw it as patriarchy. Two chapters contrast the work of the genteel writers Sarah Hale and Caroline Kirkland with the evangelical works of Susan Warner and Harriet Beecher Stowe. A bold and imaginative work, Manhood and the American Renaissance will enlighten and inspire controversy among all students of American literature, nineteenth-century American history, and the relation of gender and literature.

Studies in the American Renaissance 1993

Author : Joel Myerson
Publisher : University of Virginia Press
Page : 417 pages
File Size : 33,58 MB
Release : 1993
Category : American literature
ISBN : 9780813914534

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The 17th volume of Studies continues its tradition of presenting a wide range of scholarly articles. The essays and their authors are: A Calendar of the Letters of Mary Moody Emerson, by Nancy Craig Simmons; James Fenimore Cooper Goes to Sea: Two Unpublished Letters by a Family Friend, by Alan Taylor; The Temple School Journals of George and Martha Kuhn, by Alfred G. Litton and Joel Myerson; Bryant and Poe: A Reacquaintance, by William Cullen Bryant II; Bronson Alcott and Jacob Boehme, by Arthur Versluis; Bronson Alcott's 'Journal for 1838' (Part One), by Larry A. Carlson; Poe, Anna Cora Mowatt and T. Tennyson Twinkle, by James M. Hutchisson; Hawthorne's Moral Theatres and the Post-Puritan Stage, by Kurt Eisen; Confucius at Walden Pond: Thoreau's Unpublished Confucian Translations, by Hongbo Tan; Melville's Copy of Dante: Evidence of New Connections Between the Commedia and Mardi by Lea Bertani Vozar Newman; Whittier's 'Snowbound': 'The Circle of Our Hearth' and the Discourse on Domesticity, by James E. Rocks'; and an annotated list of the year's book publications, by Alfred G. Litton.

The American Renaissance Reconsidered

Author : Walter Benn Michaels
Publisher : JHU Press
Page : 236 pages
File Size : 36,18 MB
Release : 1989-09
Category : History
ISBN : 9780801839375

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The term American Renaissance designates a period in our nation's history when the literary "classics" appeared—works "original" enough to mark a beginning for America's literary history. But the American Renaissance, Donald Pease argues in his introduction, does not belong to the nation's secular history so much as it denotes a rebirth from it: "Independent of the time kept by secular history, the American Renaissance keeps what we could call global Renaissance time—the sacred time a nation claims to renew, when it claims its cultural place as a great nation existing within a world of great nations. Providing each nation with the terms for cultural greatness denied to secular history, the 'renaissance' is not an occasion occurring within any specific historical time or place so much as it is a moment of cultural achievement that repeatedly demands to be reborn." The American Renaissance Reconsidered examines this demand for rebirth in terms other than those ordained by the American Renaissance itself. In the seven pieces collected here it is reborn, not outside of, but within America's secular history, as the authors examine anew the period of the American Renaissance—and the period in which its history was written. Contributing authors are Eric J. Sundquist, Jane P. Tompkins, Louis A. Renza, Jonathan Arac, Donald E. Pease, Walter Benn Michaels, and Allen Grossman.