Emerson's Ghosts: Literature, Politics, and the Making of AmericanistsOxford University Press, 7 de set. de 2007 - 232 páginas It is increasingly commonplace to find scholars who circle back to Ralph Waldo Emerson and his intellectual heirs as a way of better understanding contemporary social and aesthetic contexts. Why does Emerson's cultural legacy continue to influence writers so forcefully? In this innovative study, Randall Fuller examines the way pivotal twentieth-century critics have understood and deployed Emerson as part of their own larger projects aimed at reconceiving America. He examines previously unpublished material and original research on Van Wyck Brooks, Perry Miller, F.O. Matthiessen, and Sacvan Bercovitch along with other supporting thinkers. An engaging institutional history of American literary studies in the twentieth century, Emerson's Ghosts reveals the unexpected convergent forces that have shaped American cultural history in lasting ways. |
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... transformations upon individuals in ways that remain to some extent mysterious and unpredictable. Emersonian hauntings are the result of energies that cannot be entirely explained by context—although history's impress etches itself ...
... transformations upon individuals in ways that remain to some extent mysterious and unpredictable. Emersonian hauntings are the result of energies that cannot be entirely explained by context—although history's impress etches itself ...
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... transformation while remaining multivalent enough to suggest numerous, and often conflicting, transformations. These hauntings achieve their most salient effects by suggesting ways of opposing or critiquing the often disappointing ...
... transformation while remaining multivalent enough to suggest numerous, and often conflicting, transformations. These hauntings achieve their most salient effects by suggesting ways of opposing or critiquing the often disappointing ...
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... nevertheless incurs costs, both psychic and social, to be paid by the public intellectual, the literary critic, the American Scholar. Emerson, Politics, and Aesthetic Transformation For Emerson, the literary would emerson's ghosts.
... nevertheless incurs costs, both psychic and social, to be paid by the public intellectual, the literary critic, the American Scholar. Emerson, Politics, and Aesthetic Transformation For Emerson, the literary would emerson's ghosts.
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... Transformation. For Emerson, the literary would be an always fertile, sometimes communal, site where he might address and even mold perspectives, sympathies, and ideologies. As a practitioner of the literary, he aspired to provoke ...
... Transformation. For Emerson, the literary would be an always fertile, sometimes communal, site where he might address and even mold perspectives, sympathies, and ideologies. As a practitioner of the literary, he aspired to provoke ...
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... transforming and even activating individuals. In some rather striking ways, Emerson's position in 1834 prefigures ... transform culture authorized by his religious sense that “the highest revelation is that God is in every man” (JMN 4 ...
... transforming and even activating individuals. In some rather striking ways, Emerson's position in 1834 prefigures ... transform culture authorized by his religious sense that “the highest revelation is that God is in every man” (JMN 4 ...
Conteúdo
2 Emerson in the Gilded Age | |
Van Wyck Brooks and Oppositional Criticism | |
4 FO Matthiessen and the Tragedy of the American Scholar | |
5 Perry Millers Errand into the Wilderness | |
6 Sacvan Bercovitch as American Scholar | |
7 Emersons Ghosts | |
Notes | |
Index | |
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Emerson's Ghosts: Literature, Politics, and the Making of Americanists Randall Fuller Visualização parcial - 2007 |
Termos e frases comuns
academic action aesthetic Ameri American culture American Jeremiad American Literary History American Literature American Renaissance American Studies analysis artist asserts biography Brooks’s Cabot Cambridge canon Cavell century Chapman Cheney context Conway Conway’s critique cultural criticism democracy democratic described discourse discussion dissent early effort Emer emerging Emerson’s American Scholar Emerson’s thought Emerson’s writing Emersonian England essay experience F. O. Matthiessen figure genteel Harvard haunt Holmes Holmes’s ideal ideology imaginative increasingly individual interpretation Jacksonian James Jeremiad Joel Porte John Jay Chapman journals language Lawrence Buell Leo Marx Lewis Mumford Mumford notes Oliver Wendell Holmes Parrington Perry Miller philosophical poet political portrait of Emerson problem public intellectual Puritan radical Ralph Waldo Emerson readers reading response rhetoric role Sacvan Bercovitch seemed sense social society spirit suggests symbolic theory tion tradition tragic transcendentalism transformation troping University Press Van Wyck Brooks vision words Wyck Brooks York