The Cambridge History of American Literature
This volume covers a pivotal era in the formation of American identity. Four leading scholars connect the literature with the massive historical changes then underway. Richard Brodhead describes the foundation of a permanent literary culture in America. Nancy Bentley locates the origins of nineteenth century Realism in an elite culture's responses to an emergent mass culture, embracing high literature (writers like William Dean Howells and Henry James) as well as a wide spectrum of cultural outsiders: African Americans, women, and Native Americans. Walter Benn Michaels emphasizes the critical role that turn-of-the-century fiction played in the re-evaluation of the individual at the advent of modern bureaucracy. Susan L. Mizruchi analyzes the literary responses to a new national heterogeneity that helped shape the multicultural future of modern America. Together, these narratives constitute the richest, most detailed account to date of American literature and culture between 1860 and 1920.
- A wide-ranging literary and cultural history of American prose from the Civil War to the First World War
- The fullest account available of the American regional, naturalist, and realist novel, 1860-1920
- Focuses on the interactions between high culture and popular culture in the turn-of-the-century US
Reviews & endorsements
"...by far the best there is....Other multi-authored literary histories exist to be consulted, but the first volume of the Cambridge History exists to be read with sustained interest." Modern Language Quarterly
"What truly distinguishes this volume from other major histories of American literature in this century is the impressive level of scholarly energy and critical innovation that is sustained consistently across all 700 pages of the text...the first volume of the Cambridge History contains the most substantial and sophisticated set of essays to be published together as a comprehensive history of early American literature..." William and Mary Quarterly
"...a bold enterprise. It promises to be the history of the subject for our generation..." Times Higher Education Supplement
"The Cambridge History of American Literature [...] is, without doubt and without any serious rival, THE scholarly history for our generation." --Journal of American Studies
Product details
November 2005Hardback
9780521301077
826 pages
235 × 160 × 43 mm
1.459kg
21 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction Sacvan Bercovitch
- Part I. The American Literary Field, 1860–1890 Richard H. Brodhead:
- 1. Cultures of letters
- 2. After the American Renaissance
- 3. Domestic literary culture
- 4. Books for the millions
- 5. Onstage
- 6. Literary high culture
- 7. Out of the center
- 8. A case study: literary regionalism
- 9. Regional writing and the role of the author
- Part II. Literary Forms and Mass Culture, 1870–1920 Nancy Bentley:
- 1. Museum realism
- 2. Howells, James, and the aesthetic republic
- 3. Women and realist authorship
- 4. Chesnutt and imperial spectacle
- 5. Wharton, travel, and modernity
- 6. Adams, James, DuBois, and social thought
- Part III. Promises of American Life, 1880–1920 Walter Benn Michaels:
- 1. An American tragedy, or the promise of American life
- 2. The production of visibility
- 3. The contracted heart
- 4. Success
- Part IV. Becoming Multicultural: Culture, Economy, and the Novel, 1860–1920 Susan L. Mizruchi:
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Remembering civil war
- 3. Social death and the reconstruction of slavery
- 4. Cosmopolitan variations
- 5. Native American sacrifice in an age of progress
- 6. Marketing culture
- 7. Varieties of work
- 8. Corporate America
- 9. Realist utopias
- Chronology
- Bibliography.