𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Melville's Intervisionary Network : Balzac, Hawthorne, and Realism in the American Renaissance

✍ Scribed by John Haydock


Publisher
Clemson University Press
Year
2016
Tongue
English
Leaves
344
Series
Clemson University Press Ser.
Edition
1
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


The romances of Herman Melville, author of Moby-Dick and Billy Budd, Sailor, are usually examined from some setting almost exclusively American. European or other planetary contexts are subordinated to local considerations. But while this isolated approach plays well in an arena constructed on American exclusiveness, it does not express the reality of the literary processes swirling around Melville in the middle of the nineteenth century. A series of expanding literary and technological networks was active that made his writing part of a global complex. HonorΓ© de Balzac, popular French writer and creator of realism in the novel, was also in the web of these same networks, both preceding and at the height of Melville's creativity. Because they engaged in similar intentions, there developed an almost inevitable attraction that brought their works together. Until recently, however, Balzac has not been recognized as a significant influence on Melville during his most creative period. Over the last decade, scholars began to explore literary networks by new methodologies, and the criticism developed out of these strategies pertains usually to modernist, postcolonial, contemporary situations. Remarkably, however, the intertextuality of Melville with Balzac is quite exactly a casebook study in transcultural comparativism. Looking at Melville's innovative environment reveals meaningful results where the networks take on significant roles equivalent to what have been traditionally classed as genetic contacts. Intervisionary Network explores a range of these connections and reveals that Melville was dependent on Balzac and his universal vision in much of his prose writing.

✦ Subjects


LIT024040


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Writing beyond prophecy: Emerson, Hawtho
✍ Emerson, Ralph Waldo;Hawthorne, Nathaniel;Melville, Herman;Kevorkian, Martin πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2013 πŸ› Louisiana State University Press 🌐 English

"Writing beyond Prophecy offers a new interpretation of the American Renaissance by drawing attention to a cluster of later, rarely studied works by Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Herman Melville. Identifying a line of writing from Emerson's Conduct of Life to Hawthorne's posthumously

In Hawthorne’s shadow : American romance
✍ Samuel Chase Coale πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1985 πŸ› The University Press of Kentucky 🌐 English

"The world is so sad and solemn," wrote Nathaniel Hawthorne, "that things meant in jest are liable, by an overwhelming influence, to become dreadful earnest; gaily dressed fantasies turning to ghostly and black-clad images of themselves." From the radical dualism of Hawthorne's vision, Samuel Coale

Melville and Repose: The Rhetoric of Hum
✍ John Bryant πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1993 πŸ› Oxford University Press, USA 🌐 English

This is an extraordinary effort--one of the most thoughtful and innovative analyses of Melville's narrative guises ever published. Bryant is clearly one of the nation's best Melville scholars.

Melville and Repose: The Rhetoric of Hum
✍ John Bryant πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1993 🌐 English

John Bryant's book is a strong and significant argument for the centrality of the comic and repose in Melville's novels. The purpose of Melville and Repose is dual: to ground the uses of romantic humor in Melville in sensitive readings of contemporaneous European and American writings, and to offer