Social Stories

Social Stories

Einband:
Fester Einband
EAN:
9780813922409
Untertitel:
The Magazine Novel in Nineteenth-Century America
Genre:
Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaften
Autor:
Patricia Okker (Associate Professor of English, University of Missouri, Columbia, USA)
Herausgeber:
University of Virginia Press
Auflage:
New.
Anzahl Seiten:
224
Erscheinungsdatum:
29.10.2003
ISBN:
978-0-8139-2240-9

Informationen zum Autor
Patricia Okker is Associate Professor of English at the University of Missouri, Columbia, and the author of Our Sister Editors: Sarah J. Hale and the Tradition of Nineteenth-Century American Women Editors.



Autorentext
Patricia Okker is Associate Professor of English at the University of Missouri, Columbia, and the author of Our Sister Editors: Sarah J. Hale and the Tradition of Nineteenth-Century American Women Editors.

Klappentext
Largely ignored in American literary history, the magazine novel was extremely popular throughout the nineteenth century, with editors describing the form as a virtual "necessity" for magazines. Unlike many previous studies of periodicals that focus often exclusively on elite literary magazines, Social Stories treats a variety of magazines and authors, ranging from Ann Stephens's novels in fashionable magazines for women to William Dean Howells's anxious investigation of modern mass culture in A Modern Instance. William Gilmore Simms's pro-Southern antebellum novels, the publication of Martin Delany's Blake in an African American magazine, Jeremy Belknap's investigation of the racial and national politics of the early national period, and Rebecca Harding Davis's efforts to make sense of race during Reconstruction all receive Patricia Okker's careful attention. By exploring how magazine novelists addressed audiences that differed from one another in terms of race, region, class, and gender, Social Stories offers a narrative of the American magazine novel that emphasizes its direct engagement with social, political, and cultural issues of its day. Rejecting the association of novel reading with notions of the private, Okker convincingly argues that nineteenth-century magazine novels were indeed fiercely social. Created collaboratively with readers, editors, and authors, and read among a community of readers and other texts, the serial novel of the 1800s proved to be an ideal form for exploring the strategies Americans used and the obstacles they faced in forming and sustaining a collective sense of themselves. They are, in short, novels that tell stories about how--andwhether--individuals can come together to form a society.

Zusammenfassung
Largely ignored in American literary history, the magazine was extremely popular throughout the 19th century, with editors describing the form as a virtual ""necessity"". This book covers a variety of magazines and authors emphasizing their engagement with the social issues of the day.


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