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Performatively Speaking - Speech and Action in Antebellum American Literature (Hardcover)
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Performatively Speaking - Speech and Action in Antebellum American Literature (Hardcover)
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In Performatively Speaking, Debra Rosenthal draws on speech act
theory to open up the current critical conversation about
antebellum American fiction and culture and to explore what happens
when writers use words not just to represent action but to
constitute action itself. Examining moments of discursive action in
a range of canonical and noncanonical works-T. S. Arthur's
temperance tales, Fanny Fern's Ruth Hall, Nathaniel Hawthorne's The
Scarlet Letter, Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, and
Herman Melville's Moby-Dick-she shows how words act when writers no
longer hold to a difference between writing and doing. The author
investigates, for example, the voluntary self-binding nature of a
promise, the formulaic but transformative temperance pledge, the
power of Ruth Hall's signature or name on legal documents, the
punitive hate speech of Hester Prynne's scarlet letter A, the
prohibitory vodun hex of Simon Legree's slave Cassy, and Captain
Ahab's injurious insults to second mate Stubb. Through her
comparative methodology and historicist and feminist readings,
Rosenthal asks readers to rethink the ways that speech and action
intersect.
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