This book provides innovative readings of literary works of British
Romanticism and its influence on twentieth- and
twenty-first-century American literary culture and thought. It
traverses the traditional critical boundaries of prose and poetry
in American and Romantic and post-Romantic writing. Analysing
significant works by nineteenth-century writers, including Ralph
Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau and Emily Dickinson, as well as
the later writings of William Faulkner, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Saul
Bellow, Toni Morrison and Wallace Stevens, the book reasserts the
significance of second-generation Romantic writers for American
literary culture. Sandy reassesses our understanding of Romantic
inheritance and influence on post-Romantic aesthetics, subjectivity
and the natural world in the American imagination.
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