This book charts how the cartographies of American literature as an
institutional category have varied radically across different times
and places. Arguing that American literature was consolidated as a
distinctively nationalist entity only in the wake of the U.S. Civil
War, Paul Giles identifies this formation as extending until the
beginning of the Reagan presidency in 1981. He contrasts this with the
more amorphous boundaries of American culture in the eighteenth
century, and with ways in which conditions of globalization at the
turn of the twenty-first century have reconfigured the parameters of
the subject. In light of these fluctuating conceptions of space, Giles
suggests new ways of understanding the shifting territory of American
literary history. ranging from Cotton Mather to David Foster Wallace,
and from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow to Zora Neale Hurston. Giles
considers why European medievalism and Native American prehistory were
crucial to classic nineteenth-century authors such as Emerson,
Hawthorne, and Melville. He discusses how twentieth-century
technological innovations, such as air travel, affected
representations of the national domain in the texts of F. Scott
Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein. And he analyzes how regional
projections of the South and the Pacific Northwest helped to shape the
work of writers such as William Gilmore Simms, José Martí, Elizabeth
Bishop, and William Gibson. Bringing together literary analysis,
political history, and cultural geography, The Global Remapping of
American Literature reorients the subject for the transnational era.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400836512
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
344
Forfatter