Writing Against Reform: Aesthetic Realism in the Progressive Era: Becoming Modern: Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Autor Arielle Zibraken Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 ian 2024
While realism and social reform have a long-established relationship, prominent writers of the period such as Henry James, Edith Wharton, James Weldon Johnson, Rebecca Harding Davis, and Kate Chopin resisted explicit political rhetoric in their own works and critiqued reform aesthetics, which too often rang hollow. Arielle Zibrak reveals that while these writers were often seen as indifferent to the political currents of their time, their work is a part of a little explored debate on the relationship between literature and politics at the heart of Progressive Era publishing. Examining the critique of reform aesthetics within the tradition of American realist literature of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Writing Against Reform promises to change the way we think about the fiction of this period and many of America’s leading writers.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781625347718
ISBN-10: 1625347715
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 5 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria Becoming Modern: Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
ISBN-10: 1625347715
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 5 illus.
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria Becoming Modern: Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Notă biografică
ARIELLE ZIBRAK is associate professor of English at the University of Wyoming and author of Avidly Reads Guilty Pleasures.
Cuprins
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Hideously Political
Part I: Against Reform
1. Rebecca Harding Davis and Celebrity Reform
2. Kate Chopin’s Art Panic
Part II: There Is No Opposition
3. Political Intimacy in Henry James
Part III: Art in an Emergency
4. James Weldon Johnson’s Political Formalism
5. Edith Wharton at War in the Land of Letters
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Hideously Political
Part I: Against Reform
1. Rebecca Harding Davis and Celebrity Reform
2. Kate Chopin’s Art Panic
Part II: There Is No Opposition
3. Political Intimacy in Henry James
Part III: Art in an Emergency
4. James Weldon Johnson’s Political Formalism
5. Edith Wharton at War in the Land of Letters
Notes
Index
Recenzii
“Zibrak offers refreshing perspectives on mostly canonical texts that, in her hands, come across as more politically provocative than generally assumed. This is no small feat. . . . [An] artfully written book whose implications go well beyond its focus on literature.”—Modern Fiction Studies
“This engaging and persuasively argued study offers important insights about the value of art, generally, and the value of literary aesthetics, in particular. . . . Those of us tasked with persuading undergraduate learners that nineteenth-century literature is relevant to our lives today will surely draw inspiration from Zibrak’s methods.”—Studies in American Naturalism
“Writing against Reform will swiftly become required reading for scholars of American realism and of US literary studies more broadly. . . . Through her insightful and sustained close readings and careful attentiveness to the politics of history, Zibrak models how to make literature itself a resource for thinking.”—Edith Wharton Review
“Engagingly composed, Arielle Zibrak’s Writing Against Reform incisively reassesses how realist writers responded to the social reform movements and the emergence of the social sciences at the turn of the twentieth century. . . . The book teems with revelatory readings that should inform how we teach and study the authors it covers going forward.”—The Henry James Review
“Writing Against Reform is an engagingly written and persuasively argued piece of scholarship that is a pleasure to read. This is the work of a scholar widely and comfortably knowledgeable in her field of study, and a model of how scholarship should be done: deeply researched, coherently reasoned, and always eloquent.”—María Carla Sánchez, author of Reforming the World: Social Activism and the Problem of Fiction in Nineteenth-Century America
“An engrossing and compelling study, Writing Against Reform uses an impressive range of references and thorough understanding of publishing and social contexts to offer a convincing argument that is as satisfying as it is provocative.”—Keith Newlin, author of Hamlin Garland: A Life
“This engaging and persuasively argued study offers important insights about the value of art, generally, and the value of literary aesthetics, in particular. . . . Those of us tasked with persuading undergraduate learners that nineteenth-century literature is relevant to our lives today will surely draw inspiration from Zibrak’s methods.”—Studies in American Naturalism
“Writing against Reform will swiftly become required reading for scholars of American realism and of US literary studies more broadly. . . . Through her insightful and sustained close readings and careful attentiveness to the politics of history, Zibrak models how to make literature itself a resource for thinking.”—Edith Wharton Review
“Engagingly composed, Arielle Zibrak’s Writing Against Reform incisively reassesses how realist writers responded to the social reform movements and the emergence of the social sciences at the turn of the twentieth century. . . . The book teems with revelatory readings that should inform how we teach and study the authors it covers going forward.”—The Henry James Review
“Writing Against Reform is an engagingly written and persuasively argued piece of scholarship that is a pleasure to read. This is the work of a scholar widely and comfortably knowledgeable in her field of study, and a model of how scholarship should be done: deeply researched, coherently reasoned, and always eloquent.”—María Carla Sánchez, author of Reforming the World: Social Activism and the Problem of Fiction in Nineteenth-Century America
“An engrossing and compelling study, Writing Against Reform uses an impressive range of references and thorough understanding of publishing and social contexts to offer a convincing argument that is as satisfying as it is provocative.”—Keith Newlin, author of Hamlin Garland: A Life