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Idle Threats - Men and the Limits of Productivity in Nineteenth Century America (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,746
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Idle Threats - Men and the Limits of Productivity in Nineteenth Century America (Hardcover, New)
Series: America and the Long 19th Century
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The 19th century witnessed an explosion of writing about
unproductivity, with the exploits of various idlers, loafers, and
"gentlemen of refinement" capturing the imagination o fa country
that was deeply ambivalent about its work ethic. Idle Threats
documents this American obsession with unproductivity and its
potentials, while offering an explanation of the profound
significance of idle practices for literary and cultural
production. While this fascination with unproductivity memorably
defined literary characters from Rip Van Winkle to Bartleby to
George Hurstwood, it also reverberated deeply through the entire
culture, both as a seductive ideal and as a potentially corrosive
threat to upright, industrious American men. Drawing on an
impressive array of archival material and multifaceted literary and
cultural sources, Idle Threats connects the question of
unproductivity to other discourses concerning manhood, the value of
art, the allure of the frontier, the usefulness of knowledge, the
meaning of individuality, and the experience of time, space, and
history. Andrew Lyndon Knighton offers a new way of thinking about
the largely unacknowledged "productivity of the unproductive,"
revealing the incalculable and sometimes surprising ways in which
American modernity transformed the relationship between subjects
and that which is most intimate to them: their own activity.
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