
The Regional Development of the American Bildungsroman, 1900-1960
Tamlyn Avery(Autor*in)
Edinburgh University Press
Erschienen am 30. November 2024
Buch
Softcover
272 Seiten
978-1-4744-8997-3 (ISBN)
Beschreibung
Why did the Bildungsroman, defined as the novel of development, and its protagonist Youth, become the symbolic form of the U.S.'s cultural preoccupation with regional difference amidst the nation's rapid but uneven development c.1900-1960? As a genre that historically represented the young individual's development in national-historical time, the Bildungsroman became one crucial means of configuring the culturally, politically, and economically asymmetrical effects of national modernization and the U.S.'s political ascendence within the capitalist world-system. Responding to that predicament, the novel of uneven development rose to salience, led by its protagonist, the unfixed youth, whose development within the national-historical time of Americanization is unsettled by their preoccupation with regional difference: an immobilizing entanglement I call American literature's regional complex. This book maps four prominent variations across the Midwest, Northeast, South, and Southwest that responded to that uneven development, fragmenting, and ultimately denying the Bildungsroman's consolidation into a coherent nationalist form.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Dr Avery succeeds in supporting her central argument: that the genre of the bildungsroman, associated with the early nineteenth-century European novel, took distinctive forms across different environments and regions in the US context in ways that were linked to capital accumulation and uneven development. -- Barbara Foley, Rutgers University, Newark The Regional Development of the American Bildungsroman is essential reading for scholars of the genre, as well as those interested in US regionalism, realism, modernism, and naturalism. Avery's interdisciplinary approach and attention to regional complexities contribute to a nuanced understanding of how region and regionalism are inevitably intertwined with local, national, and global concerns, particularly regarding the uneven geographic development under modern capitalism. -- Keith Wilhite, Siena College * ALH Online Review *Weitere Details
Reihe
Sprache
Englisch
Verlagsort
Edinburgh
Großbritannien
Zielgruppe
Für Jugendliche
Produkt-Hinweis
Broschur/Paperback
Klebebindung
Maße
Höhe: 216 mm
Breite: 140 mm
Dicke: 14 mm
Gewicht
318 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4744-8997-3 (9781474489973)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Person
Dr Tamlyn Avery is a Lecturer in American Studies at The University of Queensland, Australia. Her research into the Bildungsroman, nineteenth and twentieth century American literature and modernism has appeared or is forthcoming in journals including PMLA American Literature, The Mississippi Quarterly and Australian Feminist Studies. She is the co-editor of the modernist studies journal, Affirmations: of the Modern.
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION. The U.S. Bildungsroman's Regional Complex
PART ONE. MIDWESTERN NATURALISMChapter 1. Industrial Folklore and the Regional Ingenue in Dreiser and SinclairChapter 2. Developing the Countryside: Cather and Hughes's Poetics of RuralityChapter 3. South Side's Overdevelopment: Farrell and Wright's Extreme Youths
PART TWO. THE NORTHEAST'S YOUNG AESTHETESChapter 4. Emplacing Modernism: The Fitzgeralds and the Artist's Regional ComplexChapter 5. Thurman and Fauset's Portraits of Harlem's Regional Artist
PART THREE. SOUTHERN UNDERDEVELOPMENT Chapter 6. Imagining the Region of UnderdevelopmentChapter 7. The Way of the World: Hurston's Folkloric BildungsromanChapter 8. Caught and Loose: McCullers, O'Connor, and the Gothic Bildungsroman
PART FOUR. SOUTHWEST FRONTIERSChapter 9. Mathews at the Limits of the Bildungsroman's National Framework
AFTERWORD. Situating the Bildungsroman's Transnational AfterlivesWORKS CITED
PART ONE. MIDWESTERN NATURALISMChapter 1. Industrial Folklore and the Regional Ingenue in Dreiser and SinclairChapter 2. Developing the Countryside: Cather and Hughes's Poetics of RuralityChapter 3. South Side's Overdevelopment: Farrell and Wright's Extreme Youths
PART TWO. THE NORTHEAST'S YOUNG AESTHETESChapter 4. Emplacing Modernism: The Fitzgeralds and the Artist's Regional ComplexChapter 5. Thurman and Fauset's Portraits of Harlem's Regional Artist
PART THREE. SOUTHERN UNDERDEVELOPMENT Chapter 6. Imagining the Region of UnderdevelopmentChapter 7. The Way of the World: Hurston's Folkloric BildungsromanChapter 8. Caught and Loose: McCullers, O'Connor, and the Gothic Bildungsroman
PART FOUR. SOUTHWEST FRONTIERSChapter 9. Mathews at the Limits of the Bildungsroman's National Framework
AFTERWORD. Situating the Bildungsroman's Transnational AfterlivesWORKS CITED