Upward Mobility and the Common Good – Toward a Literary History of the Welfare State
Autor Bruce Robbinsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 iun 2007
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780691049878
ISBN-10: 0691049874
Pagini: 328
Dimensiuni: 165 x 237 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Princeton University Press
Locul publicării:Princeton, United States
ISBN-10: 0691049874
Pagini: 328
Dimensiuni: 165 x 237 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Princeton University Press
Locul publicării:Princeton, United States
Recenzii
Bruce Robbins's powerful case ... is that every successfully self-bettering individual relies upon others, and that the limit example of such dependence is embodied in the welfare state. Modern Language Quarterly Robbins's book makes a timely appearance, given the current interest in immigration and class mobility, especially in the U.S. Robbins carefully distinguishes his study of upward mobility stories, both fiction and nonfiction, from other work on the subject...Robbins's style is readable and energetic; his brisk, lucid analyses flow. His notes are informative, offering full publishing information about texts he used in researching and writing this interesting book. -- J.A. Dompkowski Choice [I]n its method and its claims, this highly original, elegantly written book deserves a wide audience; in its effort to recast our understanding of the (class) politics of American literary history, it merits the deepest interest of readers of these pages. -- Lori Merish American Literary History For some time upward mobility stories have been a pervasive element of U.S. political culture. This is the best book around for understanding the complexities of how they work. -- Evan Watkins Novel Upward Mobility and the Common Good is an original and important treatment of a crucially important topic. -- Dan Bivona Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net Robbins' Upward Mobility shows us what literary criticism, at its very best, can do... [He] throws into relief what had been an overlooked line of argument in other critics' works. -- Amanda Claybaugh The Minnesota Review [A] groundbreaking work of political literary criticism... His discussion of sociology as a combat sport, focused on the upward-mobility narratives of several distinguished sociologists, and on lowly origins as cultural capital, makes trenchant reading... [O]ne of the more important books of the decade. -- Judie Newman Journal of American Studies
Textul de pe ultima copertă
"A stylish and thought-provoking account of upward mobility stories and what they have to tell us about our emotionally complicated relation to the ideals of democracy and a welfare state. This is one of the most intellectually and politically stimulating books I have read in recent years."--Helen Small, University of Oxford
"Upward Mobility and the Common Good is a scintillating work of literary criticism that teaches us an entirely new way to think about the realities and myths of class mobility, and that serves to remind us of just how centrally class continues to figure in our most powerful and resonant narratives. Bruce Robbins is a shrewd and resourceful critic, an ingenious reader of plots, and a gifted writer. He offers us an account as lively as it is profound, and the precision and force of his observations along the way are hugely impressive."--James English, University of Pennsylvania
"This judicious and innovative study adds immeasurably to the cultural history of the modern welfare state. Moving with ease from English and European novels of the nineteenth century to a range of twentieth-century American works, Robbins finds in stories of upward mobility nothing less than the tacit foundations of our beleaguered liberalism. This will be an important book for some time to come."--Michael Szalay, University of California, Irvine
"Upward Mobility and the Common Good is a scintillating work of literary criticism that teaches us an entirely new way to think about the realities and myths of class mobility, and that serves to remind us of just how centrally class continues to figure in our most powerful and resonant narratives. Bruce Robbins is a shrewd and resourceful critic, an ingenious reader of plots, and a gifted writer. He offers us an account as lively as it is profound, and the precision and force of his observations along the way are hugely impressive."--James English, University of Pennsylvania
"This judicious and innovative study adds immeasurably to the cultural history of the modern welfare state. Moving with ease from English and European novels of the nineteenth century to a range of twentieth-century American works, Robbins finds in stories of upward mobility nothing less than the tacit foundations of our beleaguered liberalism. This will be an important book for some time to come."--Michael Szalay, University of California, Irvine
Notă biografică
Bruce Robbins is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. His many books include Feeling Global: Internationalism in Distress and The Servant's Hand: English Fiction from Below.