|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Theo Davis offers a fresh account of the emergence of a national
literature in the United States. Taking American literature's
universalism as an organising force that must be explained rather
than simply exposed, she contends that Emerson, Hawthorne, and
Stowe's often noted investigations of experience are actually based
in a belief that experience is an abstract category governed by
typicality, not the property of the individual subject.
Additionally, these authors locate the form of the literary work in
the domain of abstract experience, projected out of - not embodied
in - the text. After tracing the emergence of these beliefs out of
Scottish common sense philosophy and through early American
literary criticism, Davis analyses how American authors' prose
seeks to work an art of abstract experience. In so doing, she
reconsiders the place of form in modern literary studies.
Ornamental Aesthetics offers a theory of ornamentation as a manner
of marking out objects for notice, attention, praise, and a means
of exploring qualities of mental engagement other than
interpretation and representation. Although Thoreau, Dickinson, and
Whitman were hostile to the overdecorated rooms and poems of
nineteenth-century culture, their writings are full of references
to chandeliers, butterflies, diamonds, and banners which indicate
their primary investment in ornamentation as a form of attending.
Theo Davis argues that this essential quality of ornamentation has
been obscured by the enduring emphasis of literary studies on the
structure of representation, and on how meaning is embodied in
material form. Thoreau, Dickinson, and Whitman's sense of
ornamentation as a manner of attending is grounded in an
understanding of poetry as an adornment to the world, and thus as a
way of relating to what is present rather than of representing it.
Ornamental Aesthetics investigates the aesthetic practices of
Thoreau, Dickinson, and Whitman through readings of the writings of
Martin Heidegger, which also presents the human mind as an
agitated, responsive, and ornamental presence. Drawing together
work in poetics, rhetoric, philosophy, and nineteenth-century
American literature, Ornamental Aesthetics ultimately argues that
the kinds of immediate experience of attending which concerns
ornamentation should retain a central place in the study of
literature and the humanities more broadly.
Theo Davis offers a fresh account of the emergence of a national
literature in the United States. Taking American literature's
universalism as an organising force that must be explained rather
than simply exposed, she contends that Emerson, Hawthorne, and
Stowe's often noted investigations of experience are actually based
in a belief that experience is an abstract category governed by
typicality, not the property of the individual subject.
Additionally, these authors locate the form of the literary work in
the domain of abstract experience, projected out of - not embodied
in - the text. After tracing the emergence of these beliefs out of
Scottish common sense philosophy and through early American
literary criticism, Davis analyses how American authors' prose
seeks to work an art of abstract experience. In so doing, she
reconsiders the place of form in modern literary studies.
Ornamental Aesthetics offers a theory of ornamentation as a manner
of marking out objects for notice, attention, praise, and a means
of exploring qualities of mental engagement other than
interpretation and representation. Although Thoreau, Dickinson, and
Whitman were hostile to the overdecorated rooms and poems of
nineteenth-century culture, their writings are full of references
to chandeliers, butterflies, diamonds, and banners which indicate
their primary investment in ornamentation as a form of attending.
Theo Davis argues that this essential quality of ornamentation has
been obscured by the enduring emphasis of literary studies on the
structure of representation, and on how meaning is embodied in
material form. Thoreau, Dickinson, and Whitman's sense of
ornamentation as a manner of attending is grounded in an
understanding of poetry as an adornment to the world, and thus as a
way of relating to what is present rather than of representing it.
Ornamental Aesthetics investigates the aesthetic practices of
Thoreau, Dickinson, and Whitman through readings of the writings of
Martin Heidegger, which also presents the human mind as an
agitated, responsive, and ornamental presence. Drawing together
work in poetics, rhetoric, philosophy, and nineteenth-century
American literature, Ornamental Aesthetics ultimately argues that
the kinds of immediate experience of attending which concerns
ornamentation should retain a central place in the study of
literature and the humanities more broadly.
This unflinching portrayal of the squalor and brutality of New York life produced a scandal when it was published in 1893. Crane's novel tells the story of Maggie Johnson a young woman who, seduced by her brother's friend and then disowned by her family, turns to prostitution. More than the tale of a young woman's tragic fall, this is a powerful exploration of the destructive forces underlying urban society and human nature. Also included here is 'George's Mother', along with eleven other tales and sketches of New York written between 1892 and 1896.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|