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Alexis de Tocqueville asserted that America had no truly great
literature, and that American writers merely mimicked the British
and European traditions of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
This new edited collection masterfully refutes Tocqueville's
monocultural myopia and reveals the distinctive role American
poetry and prose have played in reflecting and passing judgment
upon the core values of American democracy. The essays, profiling
the work of Mark Twain, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Updike, Edith
Wharton, Walt Whitman, Henry James, Willa Cather, Walker Percy, and
Tom Wolfe, reveal how America's greatest writers have acted as
society's most ardent cheerleaders and its most penetrating
critics. Christine Dunn Henderson's exciting new work offers
literature as a portal through which to view the philosophical
principles that animate America's political order and the mores
which either reinforce or undermine them.
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