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The postbellum period saw many privileged Americans pursuing a civilized ideal premised on insulation from pain. Medico-scientific advances in anesthetics and analgesics and emergent religious sects like Christian Science made pain avoidance seem newly possible. The upper classes could increasingly afford to distance themselves from the suffering they claimed to feel more exquisitely than did their supposedly less refined contemporaries and antecedents. The five US literary realists examined in this study resisted this contemporary revulsion from pain without going so far as to join those who celebrated suffering for its invigorating effects. William Dean Howells, Henry James, Edith Wharton, Mark Twain, and Charles Chesnutt embraced the concept of a heightened sensitivity to pain as a consequence of the civilizing process but departed from their peers by delineating alternative definitions of a superior sensibility indebted to suffering. Although the treatment of pain in other influential nineteenth century literary modes including sentimentalism and naturalism has attracted ample scholarly attention, this book offers the first sustained analysis of pain's importance to US literary realism as practiced by five of its most influential proponents.
During the period of the professionalization of American medicine,
many authors were concerned with a concurrent tendency to define
identity in biological terms. Most of them doctors or patients
themselves, they used literature polemically to convey their views
about the meaning of the body and the origin and cure of disease.
This book demonstrates that emergent medical beliefs about bodily
functions and malfunctions surface in the writings of these authors
not simply as thematic concerns but as problems for narrative form.
Through a series of careful, historicized readings of works by a
range of authors--including Louisa May Alcott, Charles W. Chesnutt,
Margaret Fuller, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Frances E. Watkins
Harper, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Pauline E. Hopkins, William
Dean Howells, and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps--the book relates both
the "what" and the "how" of representation to specific theories of
embodiment emerging during this burgeoning yet awkward period of
medical history.
This extensive chronology of US women's writing and social history catalogues authors of fiction and nonfiction across a wide range of genres - novels, poetry, cookbooks, songs - and describes the events from world-transforming to everyday occurences when these works were produced. This invaluable resource is a celebration of the many forms of works - written and social, tangible and intangible - produced by American women.
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