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The Plight of Feeling: Sympathy and Dissent in the Early American Novel: Emersion: Emergent Village resources for communities of faith

Autor Julia A. Stern
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 12 oct 1997
American novels written in the wake of the Revolution overflow with self-conscious theatricality and impassioned excess. In The Plight of Feeling, Julia A. Stern shows that these sentimental, melodramatic, and gothic works can be read as an emotional history of the early republic, reflecting the hate, anger, fear, and grief that tormented the Federalist era.

Stern argues that these novels gave voice to a collective mourning over the violence of the Revolution and the foreclosure of liberty for the nation's noncitizens—women, the poor, Native and African Americans. Properly placed in the context of late eighteenth-century thought, the republican novel emerges as essentially political, offering its audience gothic and feminized counternarratives to read against the dominant male-authored accounts of national legitimation.

Drawing upon insights from cultural history and gender studies as well as psychoanalytic, narrative, and genre theory, Stern convincingly exposes the foundation of the republic as an unquiet crypt housing those invisible Americans who contributed to its construction.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226773100
ISBN-10: 0226773108
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 7 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.67 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Seria Emersion: Emergent Village resources for communities of faith


Cuprins

Acknowledgments
1: The Plight of Feeling
2: Working through the Frame: The Dream of Transparency in Charlotte Temple
3: Beyond "A Play about Words": Tyrannies of Voice in The Coquette
4: A Lady Who Sheds No Tears: Liberty, Contagion, and the Demise of Fraternity in Ormond
Notes
Index