
Evolution and 'the Sex Problem'
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A noteworthy investigation of the Darwinian element in American fiction from the realist through the Freudian eras
In Evolution and "the Sex Problem" author Bert Bender argues that Darwin's theories of sexual selection and of the emotions are essential elements in American fiction from the late 1800s through the 1950s, particularly during the Freudian era and the years surrounding the Scopes trial.
Bender contends that novelists with different social points of view explored "the sex problem," and what resulted was a great diversity of American narratives aligned with either Darwinian or a number of anti-Darwinian theories of evolution. Included are intriguing discussions of works by Frank Norris, Jack London, Stephen Crane, Theodore Dreiser, Gertrude Stein, Willa Cather, Sherwood Anderson, F. Scott Fitzgerald, five writers of the Harlem Renaissance, John Steinbeck, and Ernest Hemingway. Among the ideas explored are Darwin's theory of common descent; the question of man's place in nature; the possibility of evolutionary progress; the issues of heredity and eugenics; the Darwinian basis of Freud's theory of sexual repression; the quandary of male violence and the role of female choice in sexual selection; the power of and the problems of racial and sexual difference; and the ecological problems that arose directly from Darwin's theory of evolution.
This volume provides a valuable treatment of an underappreciated aspect of America's major narratives of human life and love and will be appreciated by literary scholars and readers interested in Darwinism and culture.
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Person
Bert Bender is Emeritus Professor of English at Arizona State University in Tempe. His previous books include The Descent of Love: Darwin and the Theory of Sexual Selection in American Fiction, 1871-1926, and Sea-Brothers: The Tradition of American Sea Fiction from Moby-Dick to the Present.
Content
- Intro
- Halftitle Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: In a Dark Time
- "Man's Place in Nature," Life Itself, and the Sex Problem
- Aspects of the Sex Problem
- Modern Psychology and the Sex Problem
- 1 Frank Norris on the Evolution and Repression of the Sexual Instinct
- Joseph Le Conte's Version of Darwinian Theory and His Emphasis on Sexual Reproduction
- Norris's Battle with the Theory of Sexual Selection
- Norris and the Repression of the Sexual Emotions
- 2 "The Chaos of His Brain": Evolutionary Psychology in The Red Badge of Courage
- Crane and William James
- Evolutionary Progress, the "Throat-Grappling Instinct," and the Emotions
- Sexual Selection and the "Law of Battle"
- 3 Jack London and "the Sex Problem"
- London's Early Explorations of Sexual Selection: A Daughter of the Snows, The Kempton-Wace Letters, and The Sea-Wolf
- Martin Eden and The Valley of the Moon: Havelock Ellis, Freud, and the Ecological Vision
- The "Bawling of Sex" in The Little Lady of the Big House
- 4 Theodore Dreiser, Science, and "It"
- The Problem and Solution: The Evolutionary Tangle and Evolutionary Progress
- Carrie's Choice and the "Distant Wings" of Beauty
- "A Real Man-A Financier"
- 5 "The Varieties of Human Experience": Sexual Intimacy, Heredity, and Emotional Conflict in Gertrude Stein's Early Work
- Heredity and Female Choice in The Making of Americans (1903)
- Q.E.D.: The Howling Wolves of Love
- "The Nature of Woman" in Fernhurst: The "Deepening Knowledge of Life and Love and Sex"
- Three Lives: Anna's "Strange Coquetry of Anger and Fear"
- "The Gentle Lena": The Tyranny of Matchmakers and the Father-Instinct
- Melanctha: "Too Complex with Desire"
- 6 Sex and Evolution in Willa Cather's O Pioneers! and The Song of the Lark
- Creative Evolution and Sex
- Marie and Alexandra: Beyond Sexual Selection in O Pioneers!
- "Dreamers on the Frontier"
- Sexual Desire in The Song of the Lark
- Sex and Sublimation in The Power of Sound
- Sexual Selection, Marriage, and Evolutionary Play
- 7 "Under the Shell of Life": Sherwood Anderson and "the Call of Sex"
- The Darwinian Pattern in Anderson's Fiction
- Sexual Difference: "The Maleness of the Male"
- Sexual Difference: The Woman "Strong to Be Loved"
- Reflections of Freud and Havelock Ellis in Anderson's Presentation of Sex
- "The Hidden Wonder Story": The Unconscious and Anderson's Transcendental Naturalism
- Sexual Violence, Play of Mind, and Transcendence in Winesburg, Ohio
- 8 "His Mind Aglow": The Biological Undercurrent in Fitzgerald's Gatsby and other Works
- "Love or Eugenics"
- The Riddle of the Universe: Accident, Heredity, and Selection
- Sexual Selection in The Great Gatsby
- 9 Harlem, 1928: The Biology of the Black Soul and the "Rising Tide of Rhythm"
- W. E. B. DuBois's Dark Princess: The Talented Soul
- Jessie Fauset's Plum Bun: A "Biology [that] Transcends Society!"
- Nella Larsen's Quicksand: Darwin, James, Freud, and the Psychology of Mixed Race
- Claude McKay's Home to Harlem: The "It's a Be-Be Itching Life" Blues
- Rudolph Fisher's The Walls of Jericho and the "Rising Tide of Rhythm"
- 10 V. F. Calverton and the Principles of Red Love
- 11 "To Be Alive": John Steinbeck's The Log from the Sea of Cortez and The Wayward Bus
- The Log from the Sea of Cortez: Ecology and Man's Place in Nature
- Sweetheart's "Rear End" and the Marriage Problem in The Wayward Bus
- 12 "Night Song": Africa and Eden in Hemingway's Late Work
- Courtship and Anthropology in Africa
- Dark Eden
- Afterword
- Works Cited
- Index
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