Novel Nostalgias: The Aesthetics of Antagonism in Nineteenth Century U.S. Literature
Autor John Funchionen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 dec 2015
Novel Nostalgias: The Aesthetics of Antagonism in Nineteenth-Century U.S. Literature establishes how the longing to recover a lost home or past drove some of the central conflicts of the nineteenth-century United States. Providing one of the few U.S. literary histories that examines cultural material from both before and after the Civil War, John Funchion argues that a diverse array of novels, from William Wells Brown’s Clotel to L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, imagined new politically—and antagonistically—charged communities through forms of nostalgic longing.
In contrast with studies that characterized the nineteenth-century U.S. novel as a consensus-generating form complicit with disciplinary culture, Funchion shows how novels shaped a series of culture wars by advancing antagonistic nostalgias. Southern slave owners and their slaves or industrial magnates and their union opponents alike enlisted the power of nostalgia to validate their rival visions of the nation as lost moments awaiting recovery. Antagonistic nostalgias legitimated the political claims of movements as diverse as abolitionism, sectionalism, populism, socialism, anarchism, and cosmopolitanism. Novel Nostalgias provides a deep cultural historical understanding of the nineteenth-century United States, but ultimately, it also allows for a better understanding of how twenty-first-century movements function.
In contrast with studies that characterized the nineteenth-century U.S. novel as a consensus-generating form complicit with disciplinary culture, Funchion shows how novels shaped a series of culture wars by advancing antagonistic nostalgias. Southern slave owners and their slaves or industrial magnates and their union opponents alike enlisted the power of nostalgia to validate their rival visions of the nation as lost moments awaiting recovery. Antagonistic nostalgias legitimated the political claims of movements as diverse as abolitionism, sectionalism, populism, socialism, anarchism, and cosmopolitanism. Novel Nostalgias provides a deep cultural historical understanding of the nineteenth-century United States, but ultimately, it also allows for a better understanding of how twenty-first-century movements function.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814252178
ISBN-10: 0814252176
Pagini: 266
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Ohio State University Press
ISBN-10: 0814252176
Pagini: 266
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Ohio State University Press
Colecția Ohio State University Press
Recenzii
“What John Funchion has provided with Novel Nostalgias is a total re-imagining of the nineteenth century and a very welcome and persuasive attempt to historicize the affects that have shaped nostalgia and to thus get at the extraordinary way that affects themselves have worked to make other histories and futures possible in a given period. The scholarship is—in a word—incredible.” —Stephanie Foote, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
Notă biografică
John Funchion is Assistant Professor of English and American Studies at the University of Miami.
Cuprins
Introduction––There’s No Place Like Home
Chapter 1––Bad Romances: Homesick Nationalisms in the Antebellum United States
Chapter 2––Confederate Narratives and the Problem of Reconstruction
Chapter 3––Longing for a People: Hamlin Garland’s and Pauline Hopkins’s Populist Fictions
Chapter 4––Left Nostalgia: Revolutionary Aesthetics in the Radical Novel
Chapter 5––Cosmopolitan Nostalgia in L. Frank Baum’s Oz and Henry James’s America
Epilogue––“Taking the Country Back” in the Twenty-First Century
Chapter 1––Bad Romances: Homesick Nationalisms in the Antebellum United States
Chapter 2––Confederate Narratives and the Problem of Reconstruction
Chapter 3––Longing for a People: Hamlin Garland’s and Pauline Hopkins’s Populist Fictions
Chapter 4––Left Nostalgia: Revolutionary Aesthetics in the Radical Novel
Chapter 5––Cosmopolitan Nostalgia in L. Frank Baum’s Oz and Henry James’s America
Epilogue––“Taking the Country Back” in the Twenty-First Century
Descriere
Shows how novels shaped a series of culture wars by advancing antagonistic nostalgias.