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Autore: | Watts Steven <1952-> |
Titolo: | The Romance of Real Life : Charles Brockden Brown and the Origins of American Culture / / Steven Watts |
Pubblicazione: | Johns Hopkins University Press |
Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (1 online resource (xviii, 246 pages)) |
Disciplina: | B |
813/.2 | |
Soggetto topico: | Cultuur |
Romanticism | |
Novelists, American | |
National characteristics, American, in literature | |
Civilization | |
Authorship | |
Authors and readers | |
Romanticism - United States | |
Authorship - History - 18th century | |
Novelists, American - 18th century | |
Authors and readers - United States - History - 18th century | |
Soggetto geografico: | United States |
United States Civilization 1783-1865 | |
Soggetto genere / forma: | History |
Biographies. | |
Electronic books. | |
Soggetto non controllato: | United States |
English fiction | |
Note generali: | Open access edition supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities / Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book Program. |
The text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License | |
Nota di bibliografia: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 225-241) and index. |
Nota di contenuto: | 1. The Novel and the Market in the Early Republic -- 2. The Lawyer and the Rhapsodist -- 3. The Young Artist as Social Visionary -- 4. The Major Novels (I): Fiction and Fragmentation -- 5. The Major Novels (II): Deception and Disintegration -- 6. The Writer as Bourgeois Moralist -- 7. The Writer and the Liberal Ego. |
Sommario/riassunto: | The Romance of Real Life shows how a sensitive, prolific writer confronted, wrestled with, and ultimately promoted the emergence of a liberal society in nineteenth-century America. |
Watts also shows how Brown's experience was central to broader developments: the rise of the novel in America, the development of gender and family formulations, the clash between republican "virtue" and liberal "self-interest," and the origins of a bourgeois creed of self-control. Perhaps most importantly, he explains how Brown helped articulate a notion of "culture" itself as a civilizing force to restrain restless liberal individualism. | |
His notoriously volatile private life, it turns out, in many ways flowed from a critique of market society and its impulses. | |
Offering a revisionist view of Brown himself, Watts examines the major novels of the 1790s as well as previously neglected sources - from early essays and private letters to late-career forays into journalism, political pamphleteering, serial fiction, and cultural criticism. The result is a fuller picture of Brown as a man of letters in post-Revolutionary America, a man who rigorously analyzed the public and private vagaries of individual agency. | |
Among the leading writers of the early republic, Charles Brockden Brown often appears as a romantic prototype - the brilliant, alienated author rejected by a utilitarian, materialistic American society. In The Romance of Real Life Steven Watts reinterprets Brown's life and work as a complex case study in the emerging culture of capitalism at the dawn of the nineteenth century. | |
Titolo autorizzato: | The Romance of Real Life |
ISBN: | 1-4214-3602-7 |
Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
Record Nr.: | 9910524844103321 |
Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
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