𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

📁

Vanishing Moments: Class and American Literature (Class : Culture)

✍ Scribed by Eric Schocket


Publisher
University of Michigan Press
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Leaves
314
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Vanishing Moments analyzes how various American authors have reified class through their writing, from the first influx of industrialism in the 1850s to the end of the Great Depression in the early 1940s. Eric Schocket uses this history to document America’s long engagement with the problem of class stratification and demonstrates how deeply America’s desire to deny the presence of class has marked even its most labor-conscious cultural texts. Schocket offers careful readings of works by Herman Melville, Rebecca Harding Davis, William Dean Howells, Jack London, T. S. Eliot, Gertrude Stein, Muriel Rukeyser, and Langston Hughes, among others, and explores how these authors worked to try to heal the rift between the classes. He considers the challenges writers faced before the Civil War in developing a language of class amidst the predominant concerns about race and slavery; how early literary realists dealt with the threat of class insurrection; how writers at the turn of the century attempted to span the divide between the classes by going undercover as workers; how early modernists used working-class characters and idioms to shape their aesthetic experiments; and how leftists in the 1930s struggled to develop an adequate model to connect class and literature. Vanishing Moments’ unique combination of a broad historical scope and in-depth readings makes it an essential book for scholars and students of American literature and culture, as well as for political scientists, economists, and humanists.Eric Schocket is Associate Professor of American Literature at Hampshire College.“An important book containing many brilliant arguments—hard-hitting and original. Schocket demonstrates a sophisticated acquaintance with issues within the working-class studies movement.”            --Barbara Foley, Rutgers University 


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Commerce in Color: Race, Consumer Cultur
✍ James C. Davis 📂 Library 📅 2007 🏛 University of Michigan Press 🌐 English

Commerce in Color explores the juncture of consumer culture and race by examining advertising, literary texts, mass culture, and public events in the United States from 1893 to 1933. James C. Davis takes up a remarkable range of subjects—including the crucial role publishers Boni and Liveright playe

What was literature?: class culture and
✍ Leslie Fiedler 📂 Library 📅 1982 🏛 Simon and Schuster 🌐 English

In a rambling series of essays -- partly analytical, partly polemical, and partly autobiographical -- Fiedler takes issue with the elitist and prescriptive tendency among the self-appointed guardians of art, and with the modern split between 'high' and 'low' forms of literature. He argues that tradi

Clases Características (Characteristic C
✍ John W. Milnor 📂 Library 📅 2017 🏛 Instituto de Matemáticas UNAM 🌐 Spanish

La presente obra de John Milnor y James Stasheff tiene una calidad indiscutible en cuanto a su contenido y presentación. Fue concebida como las notas de un curso que John Milnor dictó en la Universidad de Princeton en 1957 y está dedicada a cuatro grandes matemáticos, pilares fundamentales en la