Legal Realisms: The American Novel under Reconstruction
Autor Christine Holboen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 oct 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190604547
ISBN-10: 0190604549
Pagini: 464
Ilustrații: 11 illus.
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 41 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190604549
Pagini: 464
Ilustrații: 11 illus.
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 41 mm
Greutate: 0.75 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This book is essential reading for any scholar of American realism. It also adds an important voice to the legal and political history of postbellum America, which cannot be adequately understood without understanding the project of perspectival realism championed by Howells and taken up by the writers of his day.
In a wonderfully original close reading, Holbo situates Twain's novel simultaneously within antebellum laws concerning navigable watercraft, guardianship, majority, and slavery and within the post-Reconstruction judicial settlement. In Holbo's adept hands, Huckleberry Finn becomes, at once, an allegory of law's origins, a meditation on jurisdiction as definitive of rights, and a meta literary reckoning of the unfinished business of freedom in the wake of the sentimental politics of emancipation.
It is her final chapter on Huckleberry Finn, the most canonical of canonical American novels that produces her most electrifying insights into the period and its literature...she manages at once to convey the dynamic intersection of legal and literary realisms that is her theoretical focus and to transform our micro understanding of the most discussed novel in American literature. The aerial view and a meticulous attention to textual detail coincide in her discussion of Twain's masterpiece to produce something special in literary criticism.
In a wonderfully original close reading, Holbo situates Twain's novel simultaneously within antebellum laws concerning navigable watercraft, guardianship, majority, and slavery and within the post-Reconstruction judicial settlement. In Holbo's adept hands, Huckleberry Finn becomes, at once, an allegory of law's origins, a meditation on jurisdiction as definitive of rights, and a meta literary reckoning of the unfinished business of freedom in the wake of the sentimental politics of emancipation.
It is her final chapter on Huckleberry Finn, the most canonical of canonical American novels that produces her most electrifying insights into the period and its literature...she manages at once to convey the dynamic intersection of legal and literary realisms that is her theoretical focus and to transform our micro understanding of the most discussed novel in American literature. The aerial view and a meticulous attention to textual detail coincide in her discussion of Twain's masterpiece to produce something special in literary criticism.
Notă biografică
Christine Holbo is Associate Professor of English at Arizona State University.