The flowering of literary imagination known as the American
Renaissance had few roots in the South. While Hawthorne, Emerson,
Melville, Thoreau, and Whitman were creating a body of work that
would endure, the only southern writer making a lasting
contribution was Edgar Allan Poe. This failure on the part of
antebellum southern writers has long been a subject of debate among
students of southern history and literature. Now one of the
region's most distinguished men of letters offers a cogently argued
and gracefully written account of the circumstances that prevented
early southern writers from creating transcendent works of art.
Louis D. Rubin, Jr., brings forty years of critical integrity
and imaginative involvement with the history and literature of the
South to his informal inquiry into the foundations of the southern
literary imagination. His exploration centers on the lives and
works of three of the most important writers of the pre-Civil War
South: Poe, William Gilmore Simms, and Henry Timrod.
In a close and highly original reading of Poe's poetry and
fiction, Rubin shows just how profoundly growing up in Richmond,
Virginia, influenced that writer. The sole author of the Old South
whose work has endured did not use southern settings or concern
himself with his region's history or politics. Poe was, according
to Rubin, in active rebellion against the middle-class community of
Richmond and its materialistic values.
Simms, on the other hand, aspired to the plantation society
ideal of his native Charleston, South Carolina. He was not the most
devoted and energetic of southern writers and one of the country's
best-known and most respected literary figures before the Civil
War. Rubin finds an explanation for much of the lost promise of
antebellum southern literature in Simms's career. Here was a
talented man who got caught up in the politically obsessed
plantation community of Charleston, becoming an apologist for the
system and an ardent defender of slavery.
Timrod, also a Charlestonian native, was a highly gifted poet
whose work attained the stature of literature when the Civil War
gave him a theme. He was known as the poet laureate of the
Confederacy. Only when his region was locked in a desperate
military struggle for the right to exist did he suddenly find his
enduring voice.
Anyone interested in southern life and literature will welcome
his provocative and engaging new look at southern writing from one
of the region's most perceptive critics.
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