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Transoceanic America: Risk, Writing, and Revolution in the Global Pacific: Oxford Studies in American Literary History

Autor Michelle Burnham
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 27 mai 2019
Transoceanic America offers a new approach to American literature by emphasizing the material and conceptual interconnectedness of the Atlantic and Pacific worlds. These oceans were tied together economically, textually, and politically, through such genres as maritime travel writing, mathematical and navigational schoolbooks, and the relatively new genre of the novel. Especially during the age of revolutions in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, long-distance transoceanic travel required calculating and managing risk in the interest of profit. The result was the emergence of a newly suspenseful form of narrative that came to characterize capitalist investment, political revolution, and novelistic plot. The calculus of risk that drove this expectationist narrative also concealed violence against vulnerable bodies on ships and shorelines around the world. A transoceanic American literary and cultural history requires new non-linear narratives to tell the story of this global context and to recognize its often forgotten textual archive.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780198840893
ISBN-10: 0198840896
Pagini: 302
Dimensiuni: 164 x 242 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Oxford Studies in American Literary History

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Recenzii

Through this new vision, the author revisits both canonical and noncanonical texts and reconsiders issues of empire, slavery, cannibalism, revolution, consumption, and the female body. What Burnham ultimately offers is a new sense of American literary history grounded in the networks of commercial, political, and textual ties and derived from the vast and intertwined water world of the Atlantic and the Pacific. ... Highly recommended.
brilliant and transformative ... Burnham's historical and theoretical research for this project is vast and inspiring; the genre of the review does not do justice to the complex ideas that underpin the book and its epilogue. Transoceanic America is also clearly written and a pleasure to read, full of beautiful images and surprising connections to contemporary culture. The case it makes for using literature to enrich "cognitive maps," both our own and those of our students, is timely and persuasive.

Notă biografică

Michelle Burnham is Professor of English at Santa Clara University, where she specializes in early American literature, Native American literature, transoceanic studies, and popular culture. She is the author of Folded Selves: Colonial New England Writing in the World System and Captivity and Sentiment: Cultural Exchange in American Literature, 1682-1861 (both with the Univ. Press of New England). She has edited A Separate Star: Selected Writings of Helen Hunt Jackson (Heyday Press) and the 1767 novel The Female American (Broadview Press). She is currently working on a project that brings together literary history, book history, and digital humanities to recover the transoceanic genre of castaway fiction.