Advertisements for Myself
Norman Mailer
Originally published in 1959, Advertisements for Myself is an inventive collection of stories, essays, polemic, meditations, and interviews. It is Mailer at his brilliant, provocative, outrageous best.
Paperback
Affecting Fictions
Jane F. Thrailkill
What happens when the cerebral encounters the corporeal? In this study, what emerges is an important vision of late-nineteenth-century American realist literature and the role of emotion and physiology in literary criticism. Thrailkill offers a new understanding of American literary realism that draws on neuroscience and cognitive psychology, positioning her argument against the emotionless interpretations of the New Critics.
Hardcover 2007
American Babel
Edited by Marc Shell
Paperback 2002 / Hardcover 2002
The American Enlightenment, 1750-1820
Robert A. Ferguson
This concise literary history of the American Enlightenment captures the varied and conflicting voices of religious and political conviction in the decades when the new nation was formed. Ferguson's trenchant interpretation yields new understanding of this pivotal period for American culture.
Paperback 1997
American Incarnation
Myra Jehlen
In exploring the origins and character of the American liberal tradition, Jehlen begins with the proposition that the decisive factor that shaped the European settlers' idea of "America" or the "American" was material rather than conceptual--it was the physical fact of the land. European settlers came to a continent on which they had no history, bringing the ideology of liberal individualism, which they projected onto the land itself. They believed the continent proclaimed that individuals were born in nature and freely made their own society.
Hardcover 1986 / Paperback
The American Newness
Irving Howe
What is the Emersonian spirit? What inspired it, what propelled it? And what does it mean to us today? Howe lays before us the intellectual and personal tragedy of the first great American man of letters, yet also shows that Emerson's belief in the untapped power of free men pervades not only the lives and works of his contemporaries but is also a permanent part of the American psyche.
Hardcover 1986
American Poetry and Culture, 1945-1980
Robert Von Hallberg

Challenging the common perception of poets as standing apart from the mainstream of American culture, Robert von Hallberg gives us a fresh and unpredictable assessment of the poetry that has come directly out of the American experience since 1945.

Hardcover 1985 / Paperback 1988
American Protest Literature
With a Foreword by John Stauffer and an Afterword by Howard Zinn
Edited by Zoe Trodd
Foreword by John Stauffer
Afterword by Howard Zinn
"I like a little rebellion now and then," wrote Thomas Jefferson to Abigail Adams, enlisting in a tradition that throughout American history has led writers to rage and reason, prophesy and provoke. American Protest Literature presents sources from eleven protest movements--political, social, and cultural--from the Revolution to abolition to gay rights to antiwar protest. In this impressive work, Trodd provides an enlightening and inspiring survey of this most American form of literature.
Hardcover 2006 / Paperback 2008
An American Procession
Alfred Kazin
In this illuminating study of the "crucial century" (1830-1930), Alfred Kazin views the major figures in American writing, beginning in the 1830s when Ralph Waldo Emerson founded a national literature on the basis of a religious revolution, and ending on the eve of the 1930s with modernism--Eliot, Pound, Hemingway, Fitzgerald--and with the revelation of the "postponed power" of those who had been modern before their time--Henry Adams, Melville, Whitman, Dickinson.
Paperback 1996
The Anarchy of Empire in the Making of U.S. Culture
Amy Kaplan
Kaplan shows how U.S. imperialism--from "Manifest Destiny" to the "American Century"--has profoundly shaped key elements of American culture at home, and how the struggle for power over foreign peoples and places has disrupted the quest for domestic order. In literature, journalism, film, political speeches, and legal documents, Kaplan traces the undeniable connections between American efforts to quell anarchy abroad and the eruption of such anarchy at the heart of the empire.
Hardcover 2003 / Paperback 2005
The Art of Telling
Frank Kermode
Kermode assesses the revolutionary transformations in literary criticism over the last fifteen years and places them in historical perspective. Examining novels ranging in scope from a 1907 bestseller to the avant-garde works of various periods, he includes such writers as Conrad, Ford Madox Ford, Michel Butor, and Thomas Pynchon.
Hardcover 1983 / Paperback
Barbaric Traffic
Philip Gould
Studying the rhetoric of various antislavery genres, Gould exposes the close relation between antislavery writings and commercial capitalism. By distinguishing between good commerce, or the importing of commodities that refined manners, and bad commerce, like the slave trade, the literature offered both a critique and an outline of acceptable forms of commercial capitalism. A challenge to the premise that objections to the slave trade were rooted in modern laissez-faire capitalism, Gould's work revises--and expands--our understanding of antislavery literature as a form of cultural criticism in its own right.
Hardcover 2003
Be Always Converting, Be Always Converted
Rob Wilson
Hardcover 2009
Beyond the Land Itself
Marcia B. Kline
Hardcover
Black Fiction
Roger Rosenblatt
Hardcover 1974 / Paperback
Bloodstoppers and Bearwalkers
Richard M. Dorson
Folklore as it comes from the mouths of living storytellers has a matchless authority and conviction. Richard Dorson, living for five months among the Indians, Finns, Canadiens, Cornishmen, lumberjacks, sailors, miners, and sagamen of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, has listened to their tales, which this book reproduces with all their native thunder and salt. Rooted deep in storytelling tradition, these tales hark back to the frontier and immigrant past of an America shaped by many peoples with extraordinary experiences.
Paperback
Blows Like a Horn
Preston Whaley
Reopening the canons of the Beat Generation, Whaley traces the creative counterculture movement as it cooked in the heat of Bay Area streets and exploded into spectacles, such as the scandal of the Howl trial and the pop culture joke of beatnik caricatures. The book breaks new ground in showing how jazz, much more than an ambient soundtrack, shaped the very structures of Beat art and social life. The poetry, the music, the style--all of these helped transform U.S. culture in ways that are still with us.
Hardcover 2004
The Book the Poet Makes
Peter Nohrnberg
Peter Nohrnberg asks the largely unexplored question of how and why a collection of lyrics is transformed into a unified book. Nohrnberg's subject is not the lyric sequence, a recognized form, but the ordinary collections of poems. For his examples the author dwells on Yeats's The Tower and Lowell's Life Studies.
Paperback
Charles Olson
Robert Von Hallberg

Charles Olson is often described as one of the most influential American poets of the last quarter century; some would rather describe him as a cult figure, prophet of the Black Mountain poets and their descendants. Both judgments refer to an influence exerted as much through theories as through poems. Here is an examination of Olson's understanding of poetry that is cogent and a pleasure to read. It provides the framework needed for understanding Olson's work.

Hardcover 1978
A Choice of Inheritance
David Bromwich
For the last two centuries, literature has tested the authority of the individual and the community. With a historical as well as an interpretative emphasis, Bromwich explores this tension. He shows why the public-mindedness of the eighteenth century is as limited a model for readers now as the individualism of the nineteenth century.
Hardcover 1989
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume I, Nature, Addresses, and Lectures
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Robert E. Spiller
Text established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Hardcover 1971
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume II, Essays: First Series
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Joseph Slater
Text established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Text established by Jean Ferguson Carr
Some of Emerson's most famous essays, such as "Self-Reliance," "Compensation," and "The Over-Soul," appeared in his Essays of 1841. This edition provides the authoritative text of the Essays, with an introduction, notes, and supplementary material valuable for studying the evolution of Emerson's thought and style.
Hardcover 1980
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume III, Essays: Second Series
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Joseph Slater
Text established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Text established by Jean Ferguson Carr
Emerson's second collection of essays appeared in 1844, when he was forty-one. It includes eight essays--"The Poet," "Experience," "Character," "Manners," "Gifts," "Nature," "Politics," and "Nominalist and Realist"--and one address, the much misunderstood "New England Reformers." Essays: Second Series has a lightness of tone and an irony absent from the earlier writings, but it is no less memorable: "a sermon to me," Carlyle wrote, "a real word."
Hardcover 1984
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume IV, Representative Men
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Wallace E. Williams
Text established by Douglas Emory Wilson
Hardcover 1987
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume V, English Traits
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction by Philip Nicoloff
Notes by Robert E. Burkholder
Text established by Douglas Emory Wilson
English Traits is a searching and distinctive portrayal of English culture that today offers a revealing perspective on American viewpoints and preoccupations in the mid-nineteenth century. It is notable, too, for revealing an interesting side of Emerson's complex character; here we find Emerson the practical Yankee, analyzing English power, resourcefulness, determination, and materialism.
Hardcover
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VI, The Conduct of Life
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction by Barbara L. Packer
Notes by Joseph Slater
Text Established by Douglas Emory Wilson
The essays in this book, first published in 1860, were developed from a series of lectures on "The Conduct of Life" delivered by Emerson during the early 1850s. The published essays show Emerson's interest in many practical aspects of human life, and reflect his increasing involvement in politics--chiefly in the antislavery movement--during the decade before the Civil War. This edition is based on Emerson's holograph manuscripts and published sources, and incorporates Emerson's later corrections and revisions.
Hardcover 2004
The Collected Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VII, Society and Solitude
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Introduction and notes by Ronald A. Bosco
Text established by Douglas Emory Wilson
Society and Solitude, published in 1870, was the first collection of essays Emerson had put into press since The Conduct of Life ten years earlier. This edition is based on Emerson's holograph manuscripts and published sources. The text incorporates corrections and revisions he recorded in both sources, and thus restores for the reader the text he actually wrote. Although he is still visibly the insistent optimist of his early and middle career, here Emerson assumes a more pragmatic attitude than formerly toward the life of the mind and the imagination.
Hardcover 2008
Color and Culture
Ross Posnock
Ross Posnock offers a much needed and startlingly new historical perspective on "black intellectuals" as a social category, ranging over a century--from Frederick Douglass to Patricia Williams, from W. E. B. Du Bois to Samuel Delany and Adrienne Kennedy. These writers challenge two durable assumptions: that high culture is "white culture" and that racial uplift is the sole concern of the black intellectual.
Hardcover 1998 / Paperback 2000
Comeuppance
William Flesch
With Comeuppance, Flesch delivers the freshest, most generous thinking about the novel since Walter Benjamin wrote on the storyteller and Wayne C. Booth on the rhetoric of fiction. In clear and engaging prose, Flesch integrates evolutionary psychology into literary studies, creating a new theory of fiction in which form and content flawlessly intermesh.
Hardcover 2008 / Paperback 2009
Communities of Honor and Love in Henry James
Manfred MacKenzie
Hardcover 1975
Consuming Myth
Stephen Yenser
The Consuming Myth is a discerning account of his work that will well serve amateur and initiate alike. Yenser ranges over all of Merrill's writing to date, from a precocious book printed when its author was fifteen to his most recent publication, a verse play. He writes about both of the poet's novels and pays particular attention to the epic poem The Changing Light at Santkver His close readings shed light on Merrill's boldly and subtly original techniques, his kinship with Mallarmé, Proust, Yeats, Stevens, and others, and the network of connections among his diverse undertakings.
Hardcover
Cotton Mather
David Levin
Hardcover 1978
The Damnation of Theron Ware
Harold Frederic
Edited by Everett Carter
This Faustian tale of the spiritual disintegration of a young minister, written in the 1890s, deals subtly and powerfully with the impact of science on innocence and the collective despair that marked the transition into the modern age.
Hardcover 1960 / Paperback 1996
The Decline and Fall of the Lettered City
Jean Franco
The cultural Cold War in Latin America was waged as a war of values--artistic freedom versus communitarianism, Western values versus national cultures, the autonomy of art versus a commitment to liberation struggles--and at a time when the prestige of literature had never been higher. The projects of the historic avant-garde were revitalized by an anti-capitalist ethos and envisaged as the opposite of the republican state. The Decline and Fall of the Lettered City charts the conflicting universals of this period, the clash between avant-garde and political vanguard. This was also a twilight of literature at the threshold of the great cultural revolution of the seventies and eighties, a revolution to which the Cold War indirectly contributed. In the eighties, civil war and military rule, together with the rapid development of mass culture and communication empires, changed the political and cultural map.
Paperback 2002 / Hardcover 2002
Deliberate Speed
W. T. Lhamon
By surveying the artistic terrain of the period--examining works by figures as varied as Miles Davis, Ralph Ellison, Robert Frank, Allen Ginsberg, Little Richard, Charlie Parker, Jackson Pollock, Thomas Pynchon, and Ludwig Wittgenstein--Lhamon demonstrates how many of the distinctive elements that so many attribute to the revolutionary period of the 1960s had their roots in the fertile soil of the 1950s.
Paperback 2002
Disseminating Whitman
Michael Moon
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback
Drumbeats, Masks, and Metaphor
Genevieve Fabre

Contemporary Afro–American theatre is an exciting spectacle of an emerging black identity during a period when blacks have come to the forefront of political activity in the United States. Geneviève Fabre brings us the vast and rich production of black drama since 1945, placing it in historical and cultural context as a platform for political statement. Two strains emerge: the militant theatre of protest, and the ethnic theatre of black experience.

Hardcover 1983
Early American Proverbs and Proverbial Phrases
Bartlett Jere Whiting
Hardcover 1978
The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume I, 1833-1836
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Stephen E. Whicher
Edited by Robert E. Spiller
Hardcover 1959
The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume II, 1836-1838
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Stephen E. Whicher
Edited by Robert E. Spiller
Edited by Wallace E. Williams
Hardcover 1964
The Early Lectures of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume III, 1838-1842
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Robert E. Spiller
Edited by Wallace E. Williams
Hardcover 1972
Edwin Arlington Robinson's Letters to Edith Brower
Edwin Arlington Robinson
Edited by Richard Cary
The letters begin when the twenty-seven-year-old poet writes gratefully to the stranger who has expressed appreciation of his first, privately printed, book of poems. Soon he was carrying on an intense correspondence, baring his soul--safely, he believed, because the woman he described as "infernally bright and not at all ugly," with "something of a literary reputation," was "too old to give me a chance to bother myself with any sentimental uneasiness."
Hardcover 1968
Elizabeth Bishop
Bonnie Costello
In this finely written companion to Elizabeth Bishop's poetry, Bonnie Costello gives a compelling use of Bishop and her ways of seeing and writing.
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback
Embodiment of a Nation
Cecelia Tichi
From Harriet Beecher Stowe's image of the Mississippi's "bosom" to Henry David Thoreau's Cape Cod as "the bared and bended arm of Massachusetts," the American environment has been represented in terms of the human body. Exploring such instances of embodiment, Cecelia Tichi exposes the historically varied and often contrary geomorphic expression of a national paradigm.
Hardcover 2001 / Paperback 2004
The Emergence of American Literary Narrative, 1820-1860
Jonathan Arac
In the mid-nineteenth century writers such as Hawthorne and Melville produced works of fiction that even today help define American literature. In this work of innovative literary history, Jonathan Arac explains what made this remarkable creativity possible and what it accomplished. His work also delves into a deep paradox that has haunted American literature: our nation's great works of literary narrative place themselves at a tense distance from our national life.
Paperback 2005
Emerson
Joel Porte
Hardcover 1982 / Paperback
Emerson
Lawrence Buell
In this book, the leading scholar of New England literary culture looks at the long shadow Emerson has cast, and at his role and significance as a truly American institution. Buell conveys both the style and substance of Emerson's accomplishment--in his conception of America as the transplantation of Englishness into the new world, and in his prodigious work as writer, religious thinker, and philosopher.
Hardcover 2003 / Paperback 2004
The Emerson Museum
Lee R. Brown
In 1832, Emerson made his famous decision to pursue wholeness in his life and in his writing. The Emerson Museum shows how this undertaking transformed American literary practice by turning the legacy of European romanticism into a writing project answerable to American urgencies.
Paperback 1997 / Hardcover 1997
Emerson in His Journals
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Joel Porte
This long-awaited volume offers the general reader the heart of Emerson's journals, that extraordinary series of diaries and notebooks in which he poured out his thoughts for more than fifty years. Drawing from Harvard's sixteen-volume scholarly edition of the journals--but omitting the textual apparatus that makes it hard to read--Porte presents a sympathetic selection that brings us close to Emerson the man.
Hardcover 1982 / Paperback
Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
Edited by Thomas H. Johnson
When the complete Letters of Emily Dickinson appeared in three volumes in 1958, Robert Kirsch welcomed them in the Los Angeles Times, saying "The missives offer access to the mind and heart of one of America's most intriguing literary personalities." This one-volume selection is at last available in paper-back. It provides crucial texts for the appreciation of America literature, women's experience in the ninteenth century, and literature in general.
Paperback
Enter the New Negroes
Martha Jane Nadell
With the appearance of the urban, modern, diverse "New Negro" in the Harlem Renaissance, writers and critics began a vibrant debate on the nature of African-American identity, community, and history. Nadell offers an illuminating new perspective on the period and the decades immediately following it in a fascinating exploration of the neglected role played by visual images of race in that debate.
Hardcover 2004
The Environmental Imagination
Lawrence Buell
With the environmental crisis comes a crisis of the imagination, a need to find new ways to understand nature and humanity's relation to it. This is the challenge Lawrence Buell takes up in The Environmental Imagination. With Thoreau's Walden as a touchstone, Buell gives us a far-reaching account of environmental perception, the place of nature in the history of Western thought, and the consequences for literary scholarship of attempting to imagine a more "ecocentric" way of being. In doing so, he provides a major new understanding of Thoreau's achievement and, at the same time, a profound rethinking of our literary and cultural reflections on nature.
Paperback 1996 / Hardcover
Essays in Honor of James Edward Walsh
Edited by William H. Bond
A collection of 15 essays in honor of James Edward Walsh, Keeper of Printed Books at Houghton Library, on his sixty-fifth birthday. The book includes a tribute by William H. Bond and contributions by Paul Raabe, Philip Hofer, Eckehard Simon, Rodney G. Dennis, Karl S. Guthke, Eugene Weber, Ruth Mortimer, Eleanor M. Garvey, Anne Anninger, Hugh Amory, John Lancaster, Roger E. Stoddard, and many more.
Paperback 2005
The Essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Text established by Alfred R. Ferguson
Text established by Jean Ferguson Carr
Introduction by Alfred Kazin
Emerson, Alfred Kazin observes in his Introduction, "was a great writer who turned the essay into a form all his own." His celebrated essays--the twelve published in Essays: First Series (1841) and eight in Essays: Second Series (1844)--are here presented for the first time in an authoritative one-volume edition, which incorporates all the changes and corrections Emerson made after their initial publication.
Paperback
Essays, Comments, and Reviews
William James
Introduction by Ignas K. Skrupskelis
This generous omnium-gatherum brings together all the writings William James published that have not appeared in previous volumes of this definitive edition of his works. Miscellaneous and diverse thought the pieces are, they are unified by James's style and personality, which shine through even the slightest of them. The volume includes 25 essays, 44 letters to the editor commenting on sundry topics, and 113 reviews of a wide range of works in English, French, German, and Italian. Twenty-three of the items are not recorded in any bibliography of James's writings.
Hardcover 1987
Ethnic Modernism
Werner Sollors
In the first half of the twentieth century, the United States moved from the periphery to the center of global cultural production. How did African American, European immigrant, and other minority writers take part in these developments that also transformed the United States, giving it an increasingly multicultural self-awareness? This book attempts to address this question in a series of innovative and engaging close readings of major texts from this period.
Paperback 2008
Faith in Fiction
David S. Reynolds
The first full-length study of early religious fiction from the Revolution to the Civil War, this book explores a long forgotten genre of writing. Ranging over the fiction of some 250 American writers, Reynolds provides an overview of the bestsellers of their time and the popular culture of the period.
Hardcover 1981
A Fool's Errand
Albion W. Tourgee
Edited by John Hope Franklin
Though the discussion of sectional and racial problems is an important element in the book, A Fool’s Errand has merit as a dramatic narrative—with its love affair, and its moments of pathos, suffering, and tragedy. This combination of tract and melodrama made it a bestseller in its day. Total sales have been estimated as 200,000, a remarkable record in the l880’s for a book of this kind.
Paperback
Guide to American Literature and its Backgrounds since 1890, Fourth Revised and Enlarged Edition
Howard Mumford Jones
Richard M. Ludwig
Paperback
The Harlem Renaissance in Black and White
George Hutchinson
By restoring interracial dimensions left out of accounts of the Harlem Renaissance--or blamed for corrupting it--George Hutchinson transforms our understanding of black (and white) literary modernism, interracial literary relations, and twentieth-century cultural nationalism in the United States. A courageous work that exposes the oversimplifications and misrepresentations of popular readings of the Harlem Renaissance, this book reveals the truly composite nature of American literary culture.
Paperback 1997 / Hardcover
Harlem's Glory
Edited by Lorraine E. Roses
Edited by Ruth E. Randolph
In poems, stories, memoirs, and essays, dozens of African-American women writers--some famous, many just discovered--give us a sense of a distinct inner voice and an engagement with their larger double culture. Harlem's Glory unfolds a rich tradition of writing by African-American women, hitherto mostly hidden, in the first half of the twentieth century.
Hardcover 1996 / Paperback
The Harvard Guide to Contemporary American Writing
Daniel Hoffman
Paperback
Hawthorne's Conception of the Creative Process
Richard J. Jacobson
Paperback 1965
Hemingway
Kenneth Lynn
Ernest Hemingway was a mythic figure of overt masculinity and vibrant literary genius. He lived life on an epic scale, presenting to the world a character as compelling as the fiction he created. But behind it all lurked an insecure, troubled man. In this immensely powerful and revealing study, Kenneth S. Lynn explores the many tragic facets that both nurtured Hemingway's work and eroded his life. Masterfully written, Hemingway brings to life the writer whose desperate struggle to exorcise his demons produced some of the greatest American fiction of this century.
Paperback
Henry Adams
Henry Adams
Edited by Ernest Samuels
Ernest Samuels' Pulitzer Prize-winning, multivolume work on Henry Adams is now a compact, updated, one-volume biography.
Hardcover 1992
Henry James
Henry James
Edited by Leon Edel
Edel has chosen, from the four-volume epistolarium already published, those letters which especially illuminate James's writing, his life, his thoughts and fancies, his literary theories, and his most meaningful friendships. In addition, there are two dozen letters that have never before been printed. In its unity, its elegance, and its reflection of almost a century of Anglo-American life and letters, this correspondence can well be said to belong to literature as well as to biography.
Hardcover 1987 / Paperback 1990
A History of American Magazines, Volume I, 1741-1850
Frank Luther Mott
Hardcover 1930
A History of American Magazines, Volume II, 1850-1865
Frank Luther Mott
Hardcover 1938
A History of American Magazines, Volume III, 1865-1885
Frank Luther Mott
Hardcover 1938
A History of American Magazines, Volume IV, 1885-1905
Frank Luther Mott
Hardcover 1957
A History of American Magazines, Volume V, 1905-1930
Frank Luther Mott
Hardcover 1968
A History of Modern Poetry, Volume I, From the 1890s to the High Modernist Mode
David Perkins
This book embraces an era of enormous creative variety--the formative period during which the Romantic traditions of the past were abandoned or transformed and a major new literature created. More than a hundred poets are treated in this volume, and many more are noticed in passing. Perkins discusses each poet and type of poetry with keen critical appreciation.
Hardcover 1976 / Paperback
A History of Modern Poetry, Volume II, Modernism and After
David Perkins
Perkins discusses some 160 poets, mentioning many others more briefly, and does not hesitate to explain, to criticize, to admire, to render judgments. He clarifies the complex interrelations of individuals, groups, and movements and the contexts in which the poets worked: not only the predecessors and contemporaries they responded to but the journals that published them, the expectations of the audience, changing premises about poetry, the writings of critics, developments in other arts, and the momentous events of political and social history.
Hardcover 1987 / Paperback
In Bad Faith
Forrest Robinson
Hardcover 1986 / Paperback 1992
In Defence of the Imagination
Helen Gardner
Hardcover 1982 / Paperback
Instigations
Richard Sieburth
Hardcover 1978
John Keats 1795-1995
Preface by Richard Wendorf
A catalogue published on the occasion of the exhibition "John Keats and the Exaltation of a Genius" at Houghton Library in 1995 and of the John Keats Bicentennial Conference. The catalog includes a preface by Richard Wendorf, and essays by Helen Vendler and William H. Bond.
Paperback 2005
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume I, 1819-1822
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by William H. Gilman
Edited by Alfred R. Ferguson
Edited by George P. Clark
Edited by Merrell R. Davis
Hardcover 1960
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume II, 1822-1826
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by William H. Gilman
Edited by Alfred R. Ferguson
Edited by Merrell R. Davis
Hardcover 1961
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume III, 1826-1832
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by William H. Gilman
Edited by Alfred R. Ferguson
Hardcover
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume IV, 1832-1834
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Alfred R. Ferguson
Hardcover 1964
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume IX, 1843-1847
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Ralph H. Orth
Edited by Alfred R. Ferguson
The pages of these five journals covering the years 1843 to 1847 are filled with Emerson's struggle to formulate the true attitude of the scholar to the vexing question of public involvement. Pulled between his belief that a disinterested independence was a requisite for the writer and the public demands heaped upon him as a leading intellectual figure, he notes to himself that he "pounds...tediously" on the "exemption of the writer from all secular works."
Hardcover 1971
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume V, 1835-1838
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Merton M. Sealts
Hardcover 1965
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VI, 1824-1838
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Ralph H. Orth
Hardcover 1966
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VII, 1838-1842
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by A. W. Plumstead
Edited by Harrison Hayford
Hardcover 1969
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume VIII, 1841-1843
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by William H. Gilman
Edited by J. E. Parsons
Hardcover 1970
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume X, 1847-1848
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Merton M. Sealts
Emerson's journals of 1847-1848 deal primarily with his second visit to Europe, occasioned by a British lecture tour. The journals of these years, alogn with associated notebooks and letters, recorded the materials for lectures that Emerson composed while abroad, for additional lectures on England and the English that he wrote shortly after his return to Concord, and ultimately, for English Traits, the book growing out of his travels that he was to publish in 1856.
Hardcover 1973
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume XI, 1848-1851
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by A. W. Plumstead
Edited by William H. Gilman
Edited by Ruth H. Bennett
Hardcover 1975
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume XII, 1835-1862
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Linda Allardt
The twelfth volume makes available nine of Emerson's lecture notebooks, covering a span of twenty-seven years, from 1835 to 1862, from apprenticeship to fame. These notebooks contain materials Emerson collected for the composition of his lectures, articles, and essays during those years, a complex mixture of indexlike surveys of his journals, lists of possible topics and titles, salvaged journals passages and revisions, new drafts ranging from brief paragraphs to several pages in length, notes and translations from his reading, working notes, and partial outlines.
Hardcover 1976
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume XIII, 1852-1855
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Ralph H. Orth
Edited by Alfred R. Ferguson
Hardcover 1977
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume XIV, 1854-1861
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Susan Sutton Smith
Edited by Harrison Hayford
The journals from 1854 to 1861 show the ripeness of Emerson's thought overshadowed by the gravest problem of his time--slavery. In addition to completing English Traits (1856) and Conduct of Life (1860), Emerson wrote many of the lectures and articles that made up his next book, Society and Solitude. He also contributed often to The Atlantic Monthly after helping to found that magazine in 1857. These notebooks and journals bring the philosopher of "the infinitude of the private man" to January 1861 and the brink of war.
Hardcover 1978
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume XV, 1860-1866
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Linda Allardt
Edited by David W. Hill
Edited by Ruth H. Bennett
The Civil War is a pervasive presence in the journals in this volume. "The war searches character," Emerson wrote. Both his reading and his writing reflected his concern for the endurance of the nation, whose strength lay in the moral strength of the people. He read military biographies and memoirs, while turning again to Persian, Chinese, and Indian literature. The deaths of Clough, Thoreau, Hawthorne, and his aunt Mary Moody Emerson prompted him to reread their letters and journals, remembering and reappraising.
Hardcover 1982
The Journals and Miscellaneous Notebooks of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Volume XVI, 1866-1882
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Ronald A. Bosco
Edited by Glen M. Johnson
The final volume of the Harvard edition presents the journals of Emerson's last years. In them, he reacts to the changing America of the post-Civil War years, commenting on Reconstruction, immigration, protectionism in trade, and the dangers of huge fortunes in few hands--as well as on baseball and the possibilities of air travel. Finally, his late journals show Emerson confronting his loss of creative vigor, husbanding his powers, and maintaining his equanimity in the face of decline.
Hardcover 1982
Jump Jim Crow
W. T. Lhamon
Beginning in the 1830s, the white actor Thomas D. Rice took to the stage as Jim Crow, and the ragged and charismatic trickster of black folklore entered--and forever transformed--American popular culture. Jump Jim Crow brings together for the first time the plays and songs performed in this guise and reveals how these texts code the complex use and abuse of blackness that has characterized American culture ever since Jim Crow's first appearance.
Hardcover 2003
Land of the Millrats
Richard M. Dorson
For this book Dorson extended his search for folk traditions to one of the most heavily industrialized sections of the United States. Can folklore be found, he wondered, in the Calumet Region of northwest Indiana? In his usual entertaining style, Dorson shows that a rich and varied folklore exists. Land of the Millrats, though it depicts a special place, speaks for much of America.
Hardcover 1981
The Language of Canaan
Mason I. Lowance, Jr
This is a study of New England figurative language from 1600 to 1850, from the English and Continental origins of Puritanism to the symbolic writings of Thoreau. It enriches our understanding of Puritan thought and expression and traces the influence of Puritanism on later American writing.
Hardcover 1980
The Language of War
James Dawes
This book examines the relationship between language and violence, focusing on American literature from the Civil War, World War I, and World War II. Dawes proceeds by developing two primary questions: How does the strategic violence of war affect literary, legal, and philosophical representations? And, in turn, how do such representations affect the reception and initiation of violence itself?
Hardcover 2002 / Paperback 2005
Law and Letters in American Culture
Robert A. Ferguson
Hardcover 1984 / Paperback
Letters of Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
Edited by Thomas H. Johnson
Hardcover
The Letters of Henry James, Volume I, 1843-1875
Henry James
Edited by Leon Edel
Hardcover
The Letters of Henry James, Volume II, 1875-1883
Henry James
Edited by Leon Edel
Hardcover
The Letters of Henry James, Volume III, 1883-1895
Henry James
Edited by Leon Edel
Hardcover
The Letters of Henry James, Volume IV, 1895-1916
Henry James
Edited by Leon Edel
Hardcover
The Letters of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Volumes 1 and 2, 1814-1843
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Most of the letters, which are of prime importance in America's cultural history, have never before been published. The remainder that have appeared in print frequently did so in emasculated form and in a wide variety of books and journals. Here, scrupulous annotations supply relevant identifications of individuals, explain allusions, and present information regarding the addresses of letters, endorsements, postmarks, and the location of manuscripts.
Hardcover 1967
The Letters of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Volumes 3 and 4, 1844-1865
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
These letters carry Longfellow through the remarkable period when he was gaining renown both at home and abroad as the poet laureate of America. His influence swelled with the publication of such works as Evangeline, The Song of Hiawatha, The Courtship of Miles Standish, and Part One of Tales of a Wayside Inn. During these twenty-two years his correspondence proliferated, reaching at least 4000 letters, of which 1500 are known to have survived and are reproduced in these two volumes.
Hardcover 1972
The Letters of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Volumes 5 and 6, 1866-1882
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Hardcover 1983
The Letters of John Greenleaf Whittier
John Greenleaf Whittier
Hardcover 1975
The Letters of the Republic
Michael Warner
The subject of Michael Warner's book is the rise of a nation. America, he shows, became a nation by developing a new kind of reading public, where one becomes a citizen by taking ones place as writer or reader. At heart, the United States is a republic of letters, and its birth can be dated from changes in the culture of printing in the early eighteenth century. The new and widespread use of print media transformed the relations between people and power in a way that set in motion the republican structure of government we have inherited.
Paperback / Hardcover
The Life of Emily Dickinson
Richard B. Sewall
Winner of the National Book Award, this massively detailed biography throws a light into the study of the brilliant poet. How did Emily Dickinson, from the small window over her desk, come to see a life that included the horror, exaltation and humor that lives her poetry? With abundance and impartiality, Sewall shows us not just the poet nor the poetry, but the woman and her life.
Paperback 1998
Love as Passion
Niklas Luhmann
Translated by Jeremy Gaines
Translated by Doris L. Jones
This book takes us back to when passionate love took place exclusively outside of marriage, and Luhmann shows by lively references to social customs and literature how a language and code of behavior were developed so that notions of love and intimacy could be made the essential components of married life. This intimacy and privacy made possible by a social arrangement in which home is where the heart is provides the basis for a society of individuals--the foundation for the structure of modern life. Love is now declared to be unfathomable and personal, yet we love and suffer--as Luhmann shows--according to cultural imperatives.
Hardcover 1987
The Lunar Light of Whitman's Poetry
M. Wynn Thomas
In this many-sided analysis Thomas relates Whitman's work to American painting of the period; examines the poet's evocation of nature, which he sometimes saw as a challenge to man's confidence in himself; documents the revisions and additions Whitman made to Leaves of Grass in order to demonstrate that "my Book and the War are One"; and pays sympathetic attention to the postwar poetry, usually slighted.
Hardcover 1987
The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
Edited by R. W. Franklin
Dickinson's poems, more than those of any other poet, resist translation into the medium of print. This elegant edition presents all of her manuscript books and unsewn fascicle sheets--1,148 poems on 1,250 pages--restored insofar as possible to their original order. The manuscripts are reproduced with startling fidelity in 300-line screen.
Hardcover 1981
Manuscript Essays and Notes
William James
Introduction by Ignas K. Skrupkelis
When William James died in 1910 he left a large body of manuscript material that has never appeared in print. The most important of these manuscripts are those of the years 1903 and 1904 called "The Many and the One." The manuscripts in the rest of the volume contain James's reflections over a period of forty years in the form of drafts, memoranda, and notebook entries. The diverse subjects are arranged under the headings of Philosophy, Psychology, Aesthetics, Ethics, and Religion. Of special interest are the early notes in which James began to work out his own philosophical point of view.
Hardcover 1988
Manuscript Lectures
William James
Introduction by Ignas K. Skrupskelis
This final volume of The Works of William James provides a full record of James's teaching career at Harvard from 1872 to 1907. It includes extensive working notes for lectures in more than twenty courses. Because his teaching was so closely involved with the development of his thought, this material adds a new dimension to our understanding of his philosophy.
Hardcover 1988
Marquesan Encounters
T. Walter Herbert, Jr
Hardcover 1980
The Material Unconscious
William Brown
Within the ephemera of the everyday--old photographs, circus posters, iron toys--lies a challenge to America's dominant cultural memory. What this memory has left behind, Brown recovers in the "material unconscious" of Stephen Crane's work, the textual residues of daily sensations that add up to a new history of the American 1890s. As revealed in Crane's disavowing appropriation of an emerging mass culture--from football games and freak shows to roller coasters and early cinema--the decade reappears as an underexposed moment in the genealogy of modernism and modernity.
Hardcover 1997 / Paperback 1997
Meaning in Henry James
Millicent Bell
Believing a life to have many potential paths and a self to hold many destinies, James hung the evocative shadow of "what might have been" over much of what he wrote. Yet he also realized that no life can be lived--and no story written--except by submission to some outcome. In a major, comprehensive new study of James's work, Millicent Bell explores this oscillation between hope and fatalism, indeterminacy and form, and uncertainty and meaning.
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback
Melville's Israel Potter
Alexander Keyssar
Paperback 1969
Modern Proverbs and Proverbial Sayings
Bartlett Jere Whiting
Hardcover
Neither Black nor White yet Both
Werner Sollors
Why can a "white" woman give birth to a "black" baby, while a "black" woman can never give birth to a "white" baby in the United States? What makes racial "passing" so different from social mobility? Why are interracial and incestuous relations often confused or conflated in literature, making "miscegenation" appear as if it were incest? Werner Sollors examines these questions and others in Neither Black nor White yet Both, a fully researched investigation of literary works that, in the past, have been read more for a black-white contrast of "either-or" than for an interracial realm of "neither, nor, both, and in-between." From the origins of the term "race" to the cultural sources of the "Tragic Mulatto," and from the calculus of color to the retellings of various plots, Sollors examines what we know about race, analyzing recurrent motifs in scientific and legal works as well as in fiction, drama, and poetry.
Paperback 1999
A New Theory for American Poetry
Angus Fletcher
Intense, resonant, and deeply literary, this account of an American poetics shows how today's consumerist and conformist culture subverts the imagination of a free people. While centering on American vision, the argument extends our horizon, striking a blow against all economically sanctioned attacks upon the finer, stronger human capacities. Poetry, the author maintains, is central to any coherent vision of life.
Hardcover 2004 / Paperback 2006
The Notebooks of Robert Frost
Robert Frost
Edited by Robert Faggen
Robert Frost is one of the most widely read, well loved, and misunderstood of modern writers. His notebooks, presented here in their entirety for the first time and covering the late 1890s to the early 1960s, offer unprecedented insight into Frost's complex and often highly contradictory thinking about poetics, politics, education, psychology, science, and religion.
Hardcover 2007
Off Center
Masao Miyoshi
In this provocative study, Miyoshi deliberately adopts an off-center perspective--one that restores the historical asymmetry of encounters between Japan and the United States, from Commodore Perry to Douglas MacArthur--to investigate the blindness that has characterized relations between the two cultures.
Hardcover 1991 / Paperback 1998
On Extended Wings
Helen Vendler
Though Wallace Stevens’ shorter poems are perhaps his best known, his longer poems, Helen Hennessy Vendler suggests in this book, deserve equal fame and equal consideration. Stevens’ central theme—the worth of the imagination—remained with him all his life, and Mrs. Vendler therefore proposes that his development as a poet can best be seen, not in description—which must be repetitive—of the abstract bases of his work, but rather in a view of his changing styles.
Paperback
On the Outside Looking Out
John Shoptaw
Hardcover 1995 / Paperback 1995
On the Trail of Negro Folk-Songs
Dorothy Scarborough
Hardcover 1925
One First Love
Ellen Louisa (Emerson) Tucker
Edited by Edith W. Gregg
Letters, poems, and fragments of a journal are the only first-hand reflection we have of a personality of major importance in the life of Emerson, that of the beautiful and gifted Ellen Louisa Tucker, whom he married in 1829. The depth and transforming effect on him of their happy love is a universally acknowledged biographical fact, as is the tragic, shattering effect of her early death in 1831.
Hardcover 1962
One Writer's Beginnings
Eudora Welty
Eudora Welty, whose many honors include the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for fiction, tells the story of her early life and offers guidance for those who aspire to write fiction. Now available as an audio CD, in Welty's own voice, or as a book.
Paperback 1998 / CD-audio 2004 / Hardcover
One Writer's Beginnings
Eudora Welty
Eudora Welty, whose many honors include the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for fiction, tells the story of her early life and offers guidance for those who aspire to write fiction. Now available as an audio CD, in Welty's own voice, or as a book.
Paperback 1998 / CD-audio 2004 / Hardcover
Part of Nature, Part of Us
Helen Vendler
The poets nearest to us in time often seem the most remote and difficult. Helen Vendler closes the distance. She keeps the poet in view not only as thinker and artist, but as a man or woman whose humanity never disappears in her analysis. With her penetrating critical gift, Vendler assesses American poets from T. S. Eliot to Charles Wright.
Hardcover 1980 / Paperback
The Passion of Emily Dickinson
Judith Farr
In a profound new analysis of Dickinson's life and work, Judith Farr explores the desire, suffering, exultation, spiritual rapture, and intense dedication to art that characterize Dickinson's poems, deciphering their many complex and witty references to texts and paintings of the day. In Farr's analysis, the poet emerges not as a cryptic proto-modern or a victim of female repression but as a cultivated mid-Victorian in whom the romanticism of Emerson and the American landscape painters found bold expression.
Hardcover 1992 / Paperback 1998
Playing in the Dark
Toni Morrison
Morrison brings the genius of a master writer to this personal inquiry into the significance of African-Americans in the American literary imagination. Through her investigation of black characters, narrative strategies, and idiom in the fiction of white American writers, Morrison provides a daring perspective that is sure to alter conventional notions about American literature.
Hardcover 1992
The Poems of Emily Dickinson
Edited by R. W. Franklin
Emily Dickinson
Edited by R. W. Franklin
In 1955, the first important attempt was made to collect and publish Dickinson's work, edited by Thomas Johnson for the Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. After many years of preparation by Ralph Franklin, the foremost scholar of Dickinson's manuscripts, a new comprehensive edition is available. This three-volume work contains the largest number of her poems ever assembled, arranged chronologically and drawn from a range of archives. The text of each manuscript is rendered individually, including, within the capacity of standard type, Dickinson's spelling, capitalization, and punctuation.
Hardcover 1998
The Poems of Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
Edited by R. W. Franklin
Emily Dickinson died without fame; but she left behind an astonishing body of work, much of which has since appeared in piecemeal editions, sometimes with words altered by editors or publishers according to the fashion of the day. Now Ralph Franklin, the foremost scholar of Dickinson's manuscripts, has prepared an authoritative one-volume edition of all extant poems by Emily Dickinson--1,789 poems in all, the largest number ever assembled--rendered with Dickinson's spelling, punctuation, and capitalization intact.
Hardcover 1999 / Paperback 2005
The Poetics of Impersonality
Maud Ellmann
Hardcover 1988
Poets of Reality
J. Hillis Miller
Hardcover 1965
Possessions
Judith Richardson
The cultural landscape of the Hudson River Valley is crowded with ghosts--the ghosts of Native Americans and Dutch colonists, of Revolutionary War soldiers and spies, of presidents, slaves, priests, and laborers. Possessions asks why this region became the locus for so many ghostly tales, and shows how these hauntings came to operate as a peculiar type of social memory whereby things lost, forgotten, or marginalized returned to claim possession of imaginations and territories.
Hardcover 2003 / Paperback 2005
The Practice of Diaspora
Brent Hayes Edwards
A pathbreaking work of scholarship that will reshape our understanding of the Harlem Renaissance, The Practice of Diaspora revisits black transnational culture in the 1920s and 1930s, paying particular attention to links between intellectuals in New York and their Francophone counterparts in Paris. Brent Edwards suggests that diaspora is less a historical condition than a set of practices: the claims, correspondences, and collaborations through which black intellectuals pursue a variety of international alliances.
Paperback 2003 / Hardcover 2003
The Program Era
Mark McGurl
Hardcover 2009
Puritans among the Indians
Edited by Alden T. Vaughan
Edited by Edward W. Clark
These eight reports by white settlers held captive by Indians gripped the imagination not only of early settlers but also of American writers through our history. Puritans among the Indians presents, in modern spelling, the best of the New England narratives. These both delineate the social and ideological struggle between the captors and the settlers, and constitute a dramatic rendition of the Puritans' spiritual struggle for redemption.
Hardcover 1981 / Paperback
The Puritans in America
Edited by Alan Heimert
Edited by Andrew Delbanco
Exiled from England, the Puritans settled in what Cromwell called "a poor, cold, and useless" place--where they created a body of ideas and aspirations that were essential in the shaping of American religion, politics, and culture. In a felicitous blend of documents and narrative Heimert and Delbanco recapture the sweep and restless change of Puritan thought from its incipient Americanism through its dominance in New England society to its fragmentation in the face of dissent from within and without.
Hardcover 1985 / Paperback
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ronald A. Bosco
Joel Myerson
Houghton Library celebrated the 200th anniversary of the birth of Ralph Waldo Emerson with an exhibition of the library's unparalleled collection of Emersoniana. Edited by exhibition curators Bosco and Myerson, long acknowledged as the deans of Emerson scholarship, this catalogue explores Emerson's extensive journals, his correspondence with such Transcendalist luminaries as Bronson Alcott and Margaret Fuller, his stormy friendship with Henry David Thoreau, and the role he played as patriarch to a vast and fractious extended family of poets, thinkers, abolitionists, and cranks at the heart of the American Renaissance.
Paperback 2005
Reading the Early Republic
Robert A. Ferguson
Rebellion, slavery, and treason--the mingled stories of the Revolution--still haunt national thought. Ferguson shows that the legacy that made the country remains the idea of what it is still trying to become. He also has much to say about the reconfiguration of charity in American life, the vital role of the classical ideal in projecting an unthinkable continental republic, the first manipulations of the independent American woman, and the troubled integration of civic and commercial understandings in the original claims of prosperity as national virtue.
Hardcover 2004 / Paperback 2006
Real and Imagined Worlds
Morroe Berger
Hardcover
Reporting the Universe
E. L. Doctorow
Rich with philosophical asides, historical speculations, personal observations, and literary judgments, Reporting the Universe ranges from the circumstances of Doctorow's own boyhood and early work to the state of modern society. This series of reflections comes together as an artfully sustained meditation on American consciousness and experience, discrete episodes converging, as in the author's fiction, to form a luminous whole--a "report" by turns touching and funny, ironic and exalted, and, in its unique way, universally to the point.
Hardcover 2003 / Paperback 2004
Representative Men
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Edited by Andrew Delbanco
"Emerson is a writer who grows restless if he stays too long with any proposition. And so, as one of his most intelligent modern readers, Judith Shklar, has pointed out, he built Representative Men around the principle of 'rotation,' which had become a political axiom in Jacksonian America--the idea that no man, no matter how imposing, should be accorded permanent authority. Representative Men honors the language of democracy in its very title."
Paperback 1996
Robert Lowell
Vereen M. Bell
Hardcover
Secular Revelations
Mitchell Meltzer
The United States Constitution is a quintessentially political document. Yet, until now, no one has seriously considered the formative influence of this document on American cultural life. In this ambitious book, Mitchell Meltzer demonstrates the extent to which the Constitution is both source and inspiration for America's greatest literary masterworks.
Hardcover 2005
Self-Discovery and Authority in Afro-American Narrative
Valerie Smith
It is by telling the stories of their lives that black writers--from the authors of nineteenth-century slave narratives to contemporary novelists--affirm and legitimize their psychological autonomy. So Smith argues in this perceptive exploration of the relationship between autobiography and fiction in Afro-American writing. Smith sees the processes of plot construction and characterization as providing these narrators with a measure of authority unknown in their lives.
Paperback 1991
Shifting Ground
Bonnie Costello
Just as the look of the American landscape has changed since the nineteenth century, so has our idea of landscape. Here Bonnie Costello reads six twentieth-century American poets who have reflected and shaped this transformation and in the process renovated landscape by drawing new images from the natural world and creating new forms for imagining the earth and our relation to it.
Hardcover 2003
The Spider in the Cup
Barbara H. Fried
Paperback 1978
Strangers in the Land
Eric J. Sundquist
The importance of blacks for Jews and Jews for blacks in conceiving of themselves as Americans, when both remained outsiders to the privileges of full citizenship, is a matter of voluminous but perplexing record. A monumental work of literary criticism and cultural history, Strangers in the Land draws upon politics, sociology, law, religion, and popular culture to illuminate a vital, highly conflicted interethnic partnership over the course of a century.
Hardcover 2005 / Paperback 2008
Subjects without Selves
Gabriele Schwab
Hardcover
Thin Culture, High Art
Anne Lounsbery
In the early-nineteenth-century a perceived absence of literature in Russia and America gave rise to grandiose notions of literature's importance. This book examines how two traditions worked to refigure cultural lack, not by disputing it but by insisting on it, by representing the nation's (putative) cultural deficit as a moral and aesthetic advantage. Through a comparative study of Gogol and Hawthorne, this book examines parallels that seem particularly striking when we consider that these traditions had virtually no points of contact.
Paperback 2007 / Hardcover 2007
Thoreau
John Hildebidle
Hildebidle sees Thoreau as representative of a long-standing American tendency simultaneously to reject and to use the past, and shows how, as naturalist, he brought together science and literary aims. This gracefully written analysis of Thoreau's thinking and style will well serve all readers of Thoreau and those interested in natural history as a genre.
Hardcover 1983
To Wake the Nations
Eric J. Sundquist
Paperback 1998 / Hardcover
Transpacific Imaginations
Yunte Huang
Transpacific Imaginations is a study of how American literature is enmeshed with the literatures of Asia. The book begins with Western encounters with the Pacific, with Huang discussing such titles as Moby Dick as Pacific works. Huang then turns to Asian American encounters with the Pacific, concentrating on the "Angel Island" poems and works by Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Lawson Fusao Inada, and Araki Yasusada.
Hardcover 2008
Ugly Feelings
Sianne Ngai
Ngai mobilizes the aesthetics of unprestigious negative affects such as irritation, envy, and disgust to investigate not only ideological and representational dilemmas in literature--with a particular focus on those inflected by gender and race--but also blind spots in contemporary literary and cultural criticism. Her work maps a major intersection of literary studies, media and cultural studies, feminist studies, and aesthetic theory.
Hardcover 2005 / Paperback 2007
Uses of Literature
Edited by Monroe Engel
Hardcover 1973 / Paperback 1973
The Uses of Variety
Carrie Tirado Bramen
At the turn of the last century, amid the excesses of the Gilded Age, variety became a key notion for Americans--a sign of national progress and development, reassurance that the modern nation would not fall into monotonous dullness or disorderly chaos. Bramen pursues this idea through the works of a wide range of regional and cosmopolitan writers, journalists, theologians, and politicians who rewrote the narrative of American exceptionalism through a celebration of variety.
Hardcover 2001
The Visionary Betrayed
David L. Furth
Paperback 1980
Wallace Stevens
Helen Vendler
Paperback
The Wallace Stevens Case
Thomas Grey
Wallace Stevens was not only one of America's outstanding modernist poets but also a successful insurance lawyer--a fact that continues to intrigue many readers. In this important extension of the recent law-and-literature movement, Grey reveals Stevens as a philosophical poet and implicitly a pragmatist legal theorist, who illustrates how human thought proceeds through "assertion, qualification, and qualified reassertion," and how reason and passion fuse together in the act of interpretation.
Hardcover 1991
William Ellery Channing
Andrew Delbanco
Delbanco traces the development of Channing's thinking on the relation of man to God and nature, on the reality of evil, on the autonomy of the individual. He reveals Channing's hope and doubt concerning America's contribution to human progress. And he recounts Channing's emergence as a major voice in the antislavery movement--after a complex hesitation to embrace the cause. This is a study of the religious, literary, and political concerns of a man and his time.
Hardcover 1981
The Works of Anne Bradstreet
Anne Bradstreet
Edited by Jeannine Hensley
Foreword by Adrienne Rich
Hardcover 1967 / Paperback
Writing New England
Edited by Andrew Delbanco
Organized thematically, this anthology provides a collective self-portrait of the New England mind. With an introductory essay on the origins of New England, a detailed chronology, and explanatory headnotes for each selection, the book is a welcoming introduction to a great American literary tradition and a treasury of vivid writing that defines what it has meant, over nearly four centuries, to be a New Englander.
Hardcover 2001
Writing for an Endangered World
Lawrence Buell
Emphasizing the influence of the physical environment on individual and collective perception, Writing for an Endangered World provides the theoretical underpinnings for an ecocriticism now reaching full power, and does so in remarkably clear ways. Focusing on nineteenth- and twentieth-century writers, it reimagines city and country as a single complex landscape.
Hardcover 2001 / Paperback 2003