Samuels's reinterpretation of early American culture will awaken new interest and spark new ideas for anyone interested in this period, regardless of their disciplinary, theoretical, or ideological perspectives. Her striking thesis and fresh, penetrating readings will challenge established assumptions and generate lively and productive debates. Her splendid book will set a new agenda for early American studies.

Emory Elliott, University of California, Los Angeles and author of Revolutionary Writers: Literature and Authority in the New Republic, 1725-1810 (OUP 1986)

Samuels looks at the relations among sexual, political, and familial rhetoric in American writing from 1790 to the 1850s. With a special focus on the depictions of the American Revolution and the use of the family as model and instrument of political forces, she examines how the historical novel formalizes some of the more extravagant features of the gothic novel while incorporating a sentimental vision of the family.
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The relations among sexual, political, and familial rhetoric in American writing from 1790 to the 1850s are discussed in this text. It also examines how the historical novel formalizes the features of the gothic novel and yet incorporates a sentimental vision of the family.
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"Samuels's reinterpretation of early American culture will awaken new interest and spark new ideas for anyone interested in this period, regardless of their disciplinary, theoretical, or ideological perspectives. Her striking thesis and fresh, penetrating readings will challenge established assumptions and generate lively and productive debates. Her splendid book will set a new agenda for early American studies."--Emory Elliott, University of California, Los Angeles and author of Revolutionary Writers: Literature and Authority in the New Republic, 1725-1810 (OUP 1986) "Romances of the Republic is a striking investigation, through both literature and historical documents, of the connections between nationalism and the bonds of personal liberty represented by the family. In its welcome attention to questions of rebellion, violence, and social control that had their emblem in the family's precarious structures of authority, the book promises to revise dramatically our notions of the novel as a social instrument."--Eric Sundquist, University of California, Los Angeles and editor of The Oxford W. E. B. Du Bois Reader (OUP 1996) "The publication of Romances of the Republic has been eagerly anticipated by scholars of early US culture. In it, Samuels redefines the terrain of traditional studies of early national culture and the early novel. Stepping past the separate-spheres habit of literary and cultural studies and refusing to be blinkered by sentimental reverence for familial forms, Samuels reads the (often violent) linkages between familial and political."--Dana Nelson, University of Kentucky and author of The Word in Black and White: Reading "Race" in American Literature, 1638-1867 (OUP 1993) "Frequently original and sometimes dazzlingly so in its specific readings, this book breaks new ground in a variety of ways. First and foremost, Samuels has changed the matrix for studying republican ideology, from self-fashioning to family fashioning."--David Leverenz, University of Florida Romances of the Republic is indeed a major work in early republican studies, one that successfully melds old categorical oppositions to produce an entirely new sense of what we mean by the politics of domesticity."--William and Mary Quarterly "Samuels's reinterpretation of early American culture will awaken new interest and spark new ideas for anyone interested in this period, regardless of their disciplinary, theoretical, or ideological perspectives. Her striking thesis and fresh, penetrating readings will challenge established assumptions and generate lively and productive debates. Her splendid book will set a new agenda for early American studies."--Emory Elliott, University of California, Los Angeles and author of Revolutionary Writers: Literature and Authority in the New Republic, 1725-1810 (OUP 1986) "Romances of the Republic is a striking investigation, through both literature and historical documents, of the connections between nationalism and the bonds of personal liberty represented by the family. In its welcome attention to questions of rebellion, violence, and social control that had their emblem in the family's precarious structures of authority, the book promises to revise dramatically our notions of the novel as a social instrument."--Eric Sundquist, University of California, Los Angeles and editor of The Oxford W. E. B. Du Bois Reader (OUP 1996) "The publication of Romances of the Republic has been eagerly anticipated by scholars of early US culture. In it, Samuels redefines the terrain of traditional studies of early national culture and the early novel. Stepping past the separate-spheres habit of literary and cultural studies and refusing to be blinkered by sentimental reverence for familial forms, Samuels reads the (often violent) linkages between familial and political."--Dana Nelson, University of Kentucky and author of The Word in Black and White: Reading "Race" in American Literature, 1638-1867 (OUP 1993) "Frequently original and sometimes dazzlingly so in its specific readings, this book breaks new ground in a variety of ways. First and foremost, Samuels has changed the matrix for studying republican ideology, from self-fashioning to family fashioning."--David Leverenz, University of Florida Romances of the Republic is indeed a major work in early republican studies, one that successfully melds old categorical oppositions to produce an entirely new sense of what we mean by the politics of domesticity."--William and Mary Quarterly "Both its critique of "cultural work" analysis and its introduction of the third term, family, into the study of individual and society in American literature, should spur others to build on the foundations Samuels has established in this book."--Journal of English and Germanic Philology "Romances of the Republic provides an indispensable inner history of a critical cultural period...[W]ith its wealth of seminal insights, Romances of the Republic is bound to stimulate bold new readings of early American novels."--American Literature
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780195079883
Publisert
1996
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
490 gr
Høyde
164 mm
Bredde
244 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
208

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