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Adulthood and Other Fictions - American Literature and the Unmaking of Age (Hardcover)
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Adulthood and Other Fictions - American Literature and the Unmaking of Age (Hardcover)
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While the field of childhood studies has blossomed in recent years,
few scholars have taken up the question of age more broadly as a
lens for reading American literature. Adulthood and Other Fictions
shows how a diverse array of nineteenth-century writers, thinkers,
and artists responded to the rise of chronological age in social
and political life. Over the course of the century, age was added
to the census; schools were organized around age groups; birthday
cards were mass-produced; geriatrics became a medical specialty.
Adulthood and Other Fictions reads American literature as a rich,
critical account of this modern culture of age, and it examines how
our most well-known writers registered-and often resisted-age
expectations, particularly as they applied to women and people of
color. More than simply adding age to the list of identity
categories that have become de rigueur sites of scholarly
attention, Adulthood and Other Fictions argues that these other
measures of social location (race, gender, sexuality, class) are
largely legible through the seemingly more natural and essential
identity defined by age. That is, longstanding cultural ideals
about maturity and development anchor ideologies of
heterosexuality, race, nationalism, and capitalism, and in this
sense, age rhetoric serves as one of our most pervasive
disciplinary discourses. Writers including Louisa May Alcott,
Frederick Douglass, and Henry James anticipated the ageism of our
moment, but they also recognized how age norms both structure and
limit the lives of individuals at all points on the age continuum.
Ultimately, the volume argues for an intersectional understanding
of age that challenges the celebration of independence and autonomy
imbricated in US fantasies of adulthood and in American identity
itself.
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