๐”– Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

๐Ÿ“

Constructing American Lives: Biography and Culture in Nineteenth-Century America

โœ Scribed by Scott E. Casper


Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Year
2018
Tongue
English
Leaves
456
Category
Library

โฌ‡  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


Nineteenth-century American authors, critics, and readers believed that biography had the power to shape individuals' characters and to help define the nation's identity. In an age predating radio and television, biography was not simply a genre of writing, says Scott Casper; it was the medium that allowed people to learn about public figures and peer into the lives of strangers. In this pioneering study, Casper examines how Americans wrote, published, and read biographies and how their conceptions of the genre changed over the course of a century.
Campaign biographies, memoirs of pious women, patriotic narratives of eminent statesmen, "mug books" that collected the lives of ordinary midwestern farmers--all were labeled "biography," however disparate their contents and the contexts of their creation, publication, and dissemination. Analyzing debates over how these diverse biographies should be written and read, Casper reveals larger disputes over the meaning of character, the definition of American history, and the place of American literary practices in a transatlantic world of letters. As much a personal experience as a literary genre, biography helped Americans imagine their own lives as well as the ones about which they wrote and read.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Religion in Nineteenth Century America (
โœ Grant Wacker ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 2000 ๐ŸŒ English

Written from the perspective of the various denominations that thrived in the 19th century, this comprehensive survey of the middle period in America's religious past actually starts a little earlier, in the 1780s. In the aftermath of the American Revolution, the citizens of the newly-minted republi

Revised Lives: Whitman, Religion, and Co
โœ Pannapacker ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 2003 ๐ŸŒ English

An examination of self-representation in US culture. Drawing on studies of the history of the book, Pierre Bourdieu's sociology, and ethnic and gender revisionism, it focuses on the processes of national development, the self-construction of authorial personae and the appropriation of the personae b

Spirits of America: Intoxication in Nine
โœ Nicholas O. Warner ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 1997 ๐Ÿ› University of Oklahoma Press ๐ŸŒ English

Spirits of America is the first book-length study of intoxication as represented in nineteenth-century American literature. Emphasizing the writings of such major figures as Emerson, Dickinson, Poe, Cooper, Hawthorne, Melville, Alcott, and Stowe, Nicholas O. Warner combines literary analysis with so

cover
โœ Warner, Nicholas O., 1950- ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 1997 ๐Ÿ› Norman : University of Oklahoma Press ๐ŸŒ English

Spirits of America demonstrates the pervasiveness, complexity, and significance of an often neglected but important subject in American literature, one that touches on basic aspects of human behavior, perception, and consciousness and that has preoccupied many of our greatest writers. A significant

Without Benefit of Clergy: Women and the
โœ Karin E. Gedge ๐Ÿ“‚ Library ๐Ÿ“… 2003 ๐ŸŒ English

The common view of the nineteenth-century pastoral relationship--found in both contemporary popular accounts and 20th-century scholarship--was that women and clergymen formed a natural alliance and enjoyed a particular influence over each other. In Without Benefit of Clergy, Karin Gedge tests this t