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196.35 Książki Harvard University Press

A New Literary History of America

Marcus Greil

Oprawa: Twarda

Opis

America is a nation making itself up as it goes along - a story of discovery and invention unfolding in speeches and images, letters and poetry, unprecedented feats of scholarship and imagination. In these myriad, multiform, endlessly changing expressions of the American experience, the authors and editors of this volume find a new American history. In more than two hundred original essays, "A New Literary History of America" brings together the nation's many voices. From the first conception of a New World in the sixteenth century to the latest re-envisioning of that world in cartoons, television, science fiction, and hip hop, the book gives us a new, kaleidoscopic view of what 'Made in America' means. Literature, music, film, art, history, science, philosophy, political rhetoric - cultural creations of every kind appear in relation to each other, and to the time and place that give them shape. The meeting of minds is extraordinary as T.J. Clark writes on Jackson Pollock, Paul Muldoon on Carl Sandburg, Camille Paglia on Tennessee Williams, Sarah Vowell on Grant Wood's "American Gothic", Walter Mosley on hard-boiled detective fiction, Jonathan Lethem on Thomas Edison, Gerald Early on Tarzan, Bharati Mukherjee on "The Scarlet Letter", Gish Jen on "Catcher in the Rye", and Ishmael Reed on Huckleberry Finn. From Anne Bradstreet and John Winthrop to Philip Roth and Toni Morrison, from Alexander Graham Bell and Stephen Foster to Alcoholics Anonymous, Life, Chuck Berry, Alfred Hitchcock, and Ronald Reagan, this is America singing, celebrating itself, and becoming something altogether different, plural, singular, and new. In snapshots of a few thousand words each, the entries in A New Literary History put on display the exploring, tinkering and risk-taking that have contributed to the invention of America...A New Literary History of America gives us what amounts to a fractal geometry of American culture. You can focus on any one spot and get a sense of the whole or pull back and watch the larger patterns appear. What you see isn't the past so much as the present. -- Wes Davis Wall Street Journal 20090926 A New Literary History of America is not your typical Harvard University Press anthology...[It] roams far beyond any standard definition of literature. Aside from compositions that contain the written word, its subjects include war memorials, jazz, museums, comic strips, film, radio, musicals, skyscrapers, cybernetics and photography. -- Patricia Cohen New York Times 20090922 This magnificent volume is a vast, inquisitive, richly surprising and consistently enlightening wallow in our national history and culture...Neither reference nor criticism, neither history nor treatise, but a genre-defying, transcendent fusion of them all. It sounds impossible, but the result seems both inevitable and necessary and profoundly welcome, too...This book is not so much a history of our literature as it is a literary version of our history, told through the culture we've created to recount our past and conjure our future...In the age of Wikipedia, a reference book like this needs more than just the facts; it needs to tell us what the facts mean, and A New Literary History does just that. -- Laura Miller Salon 20090922 Ambitious, thought-provoking, and comprehensive, A New Literary History of America edited by Greil Marcus and Werner Sollors, features more than 200 essays on poems, letters, novels, memoirs, speeches, movies, and theater, by writers ranging from Bharati Mukherjee to John Edgar Wideman, reinterpreting the American experience form the 1500s forward. Elle 20091001 The huge, welcoming, exciting, just-published volume A New Literary History of America is a book with which to spend entire days and the rest of your life...Where else are you going to read Camille Paglia on Tennessee Williams, Mary Gaitskill on Norman Mailer, and Walter Mosley on the hardboiled detective novel? Don't you want to do that right now?...Talk about an all-American value: You could read this 1,000-plus-page book forever and never use up its revelations and its pleasures. -- Ken Tucker Entertainment Weekly online 20090923 [This] represents a rethinking of the awkward genre of literary history, which can fall disappointingly between the cracks of straight criticism and narrative history, devolving into a dull recitation of author bios and conventional literary wisdom. With the help of an editorial board, Marcus and Sollors settled on 216 artworks (film and painting as well as texts), authors, movements, and cultural artifacts that help answer the question, "What is America?" Emerson, Melville, Dickinson, and Faulkner are in there, to be sure, but so are the Winchester rifle, "Steamboat Willie," Chuck Berry's "Roll Over Beethoven," Alcoholics Anonymous, and Linda Lovelace (the star of the pornographic film "Deep Throat," who later said she'd been raped during its filming)...It will be a welcome change if a "literary history," for once, stirs up a little dust. -- Christopher Shea Boston Globe Brainiac blog 20090826 [An] essential, eclectic doorstop anthology. New York Magazine 20090913 The full national-literary character of the United States is on display in this mighty history and reference work for our time. Written by a distinguished team, under the sure-handed editorship of musicologist and historian Marcus and Sollors...this volume begins with America's first appearance on a map and concludes with the election of President Obama. Among the more than 200 contributors are Bharati Mukherjee (on The Scarlet Letter), Camille Paglia (on Tennessee Williams) and Ishmael Reed (on The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn)...This is an astounding achievement in multiculturalism and American studies, which in the age of Google and the Internet lights the way toward serious interpretive reference publishing. (Starred Review) Publishers Weekly Of course it's hefty; it's a "broadly cultural history" of America with a literary bent, an avid and provocative collaboration that tracks the American story not only through works of American literature, classic and forgotten, but also via music, art, pop culture, speeches, letters, religious tracts, photographs, and Supreme Court decisions. Versatile social critic and historian Marcus, Harvard University professor of English and African American studies Sollors, and their illustrious board of editors assembled more than 200 commissioned essays, which meander chronologically from 1507 and the first appearance on a map of the name "America" to Barack Obama's election. In between is a dazzling array of inquiries into Gone with the Wind and Invisible Man, The Wizard of Oz and the blues, hard-boiled detective stories and Mickey Mouse, "Howl" and Miles Davis, nature writing and Zora Neale Hurston. With such contributors as Elizabeth Alexander, Mary Gaitskill, Bharati Mukherjee, Richard Powers, Ishmael Reed, David Thomson, David Treuer, and John Edgar Wideman, this is an adventurous, jazzily choral, and kaleidoscopic book of interpretations, illuminations, and revitalized history. -- Donna Seaman Booklist 20090901 Marcus and Sollors trace through literature the dynamism of American society and culture spanning 500 years, from the first time the name America appears on a map (1507) to the election of Barack Obama as president...No single volume can fully capture the range of a nation's literary history, but this book succeeds in highlighting new ideas and providing a starting point for further investigation. Above all, it is a pleasure to read. -- Mark Alan Williams Library Journal 20090815 Reading this gorgeous compendium on the written word in America should be required for gaining or maintaining U.S. citizenship. And even at more than 1,000 pages, it's a fun way to learn what we're all about...The list of contributors is a rich, varied array of our best contemporary writers and cultural mavens...The editors were aiming for "a reexamination of the AmTimeline Introduction
Greil Marcus and Werner Sollors
1507 The name "America" appears on a map
Toby Lester 1521, August 13 Mexico in America
Kirsten Silva Gruesz
1536, July 24 Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca
Ilan Stavans 1585 "Counterfeited according to the truth"
Michael Gaudio
1607 Fear and love in the Virginia colony
Adam Goodheart 1630 A city upon a hill
Elizabeth Winthrop
1643 A nearer neighbor to the Indians
Ted Widmer 1666, July 10 Anne Bradstreet
Wai Chee Dimock
1670 The American jeremiad
Emory Elliott 1670 The stamp of God's image
Jason D. LaFountain
1673 The Jesuit relations
Laurent Dubois 1683 Francis Daniel Pastorius
Alfred L. Brophy
1692 The Salem witchcraft trials
Susan Castillo 1693--94, March 4 Edward Taylor
Werner Sollors
1700 Samuel Sewall, The Selling of Joseph
David Blight 1722 Benjamin Franklin, The Silence Dogood Letters
Joyce E. Chaplin
1740 The Great Awakening
Joanne van der Woude 1740s, September 13-14 1814, Yankee Doodle goes to town; Francis Scott Key writes The Star-Spangled Banner 1765, December 23 Michel-Guillaume Jean de Crevecoeur
Leo Damrosch
1773, September Phillis Wheatley
Rafia Zafar 1776 The Declaration of Independence
Frank Kelleter
1784, June Charles Willson Peale
Michael Leja 1787 James Madison, Notes of the Debates in the Federal Convention
Mitchell Meltzer
1787--1790 John Adams, Discourses on Davila
John Diggins 1791 Philip Freneau and The National Gazette
Jefrey L. Pasley
1796 Washington's farewell address
Francois Furstenberg 1798 Mary Rowlandson and the Alien and Sedition Acts
Nancy Armstrong
1798 American gothic
Marc Amfreville 1801, March 4 Jefferson's first inaugural address
Jan Ellen Lewis
1804, January The matter of Haiti
Kaiama Glover 1809 Cupola of the world
Judith Richardson
1819 The Missouri crisis
John Stauffer 1820, November 27 Landscape with birds
Christoph Irmscher
1821 Sequoyah, the Cherokee syllabary
Lisa Brooks 1821, June 30 Junius Brutus Booth
Coppelia Kahn
1822 Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, the Ojibwe firefly, and Longfellow's Hiawatha
David Treuer 1825, November Thomas Cole and the Hudson River
Alan Wallach
1826, July 4 Songs of the republic
Steve Erickson 1826 Cooper's Leatherstocking tales
Richard Hutson
1826; 1927 Transnational poetry
Stephen Burt 1827 Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon
Terryl L. Givens
1828 David Walker, Appeal, in Four Articles
Tommie Shelby 1830, May 21 Jump Jim Crow
W. T. Lhamon, Jr.
1831, March 5 The Cherokee Nation decision
Philip Deloria 1832, July 10 President Jackson's bank veto
Dan Feller
1835, January Democracy in America
Ted Widmer 1835 William Gilmore Simms, The Yemasseee
Jefrey Johnson
1835 The Sacred Harp
Sean Wilentz 1836, February 23--March 6 The Alamo and Texas border writing
Norma E. Cantu
1836, February 28 Richard Henry Dana, Jr.
Kirsten Silva Gruesz 1837, August 31 Ralph Waldo Emerson, "The American Scholar"
James Conant
1838, July 15 "The Divinity School Address"
Herwig Friedl 1838, September 3 The slave narrative
Caille Millner
1841 "The Murders in the Rue Morgue"
Robert Clark 1846, June James Russell Lowell's Biglow Papers
Shelley Streeby
1846, late July Henry David Thoreau
Jonathan Arac 1850 The Scarlet Letter
Bharati Mukherje
1850, July 19 Margaret Fuller and the Transcendentalist Movement
Lawrence Buell 1850, August 5 Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville
Clark Blaise 1851, Moby-Dick 1851 Uncle Tom's Cabin
Beverly Lowry
1852 Hawthorne's Blithedale Romance and utopian communities
Winfried Fluck 1852, July 5 Frederick Douglass, "What to the slave is the Fourth of July?"
Liam Kennedy
1854, March Maria Cummins and sentimental fiction
Cindy Weinstein 1855 Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass
Angus Fletcher
1858 The Lincoln-Douglas debates
Michael T. Gilmore 1859 The science of the Indian
Scott Richard Lyons
1861 Emily Dickinson
Susan Stewart 1862, December 13 The journeys of Little Women
Shirley Samuels
1865, March 4 Lincoln's second inaugural address
Ted Widmer 1865 "Conditions of repose"
Robin Kelsey
1869, March 4 Carl Schurz
Michael Boyden 1872, November 5 All men and women are created equal
Laura Wexler
1875 The Winchester Rifle
Merritt Roe Smith 1876, January 6 Melville in the dark
Kenneth W. Warren
1876, March 10 The art of telephony
Avital Ronell 1878 "How to Make Our Ideas Clear"
Christopher Hookway
1879 John Muir and nature writing
Scott Slovic 1881, January 24 Henry James, Portrait of a Lady
Alide Cagidemetrio

Szczegóły

Tytuł
A New Literary History of America
Autor
Marcus Greil
Rok wydania
2009
Oprawa
Twarda
Ilość stron
1128
ISBN
9780674035942
EAN
9780674035942

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