Representative works are interpreted in light of the two great
political movements of the nineteenth century: the abolition of
slavery and the women's rights movement. By reexamining Emerson,
Poe, Melville, Douglass, Walt Whitman, Chopin, and Faulkner and
others, Rowe assesses the degree to which major writers' attitudes
toward race, class, and gender contribute to specific political
reforms in nineteenth and twentieth-century American culture.
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