Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Sympathy in American Literature: American Sentiments from Jefferson to the Jameses
Sympathy in American Literature: American Sentiments from Jefferson to the Jameses | Kristin Boudreau
In this chronicle of the role of sympathy in American literature and culture from the colonial period to the Gilded Age, Boudreau shows how the sentiment of fellow-feeling was repeatedly recruited at moments of national and personal crisis. Unlike many treatments of attachment and sentimentality, this book avoids positing either the radical or the conservative account of sympathy. Drawing on a range of texts from John Winthrop's 1630 Model of Christian Charity to William James's 1902 Varieties of Religious Experience, the work explores the entire complicated legacy of sympathy in American culture. In examining what she calls the cultural fiction of consanguinity, or shared blood, the author illuminates both its possibilities for soothing social and political divisions as well as its social and psychological costs. In one of the few books to trace the influence of writers of the Early Republic on antebellum sentimental works, Boudreau offers an array of examples from inside and outside the canon to illustrate that sentimental culture did not end with the Civil War. Boudreau's canvas is uniquely broad and detailed; she looks for her evidence in the works of Thomas Jefferson as we
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
No posts yet.