21 research outputs found
Manacled to Identity: Cosmopolitanism, Class, and âThe Culture Conceptâ in Stephen Crane
This article begins with a close reading of Stephen Craneâs short story âManacledâ from 1900, which situates this rarely considered short work within the context of contemporary debates about realism. I then proceed to argue that many of the debates raised by the tale have an afterlife in our own era of American literary studies, which has frequently focused on questions of âidentityâ and âcultureâ in its reading of realism and naturalism to the exclusion of the importance of cosmopolitan discourses of diffusion and exchange across national borders. I then offer a brief reading of Craneâs novel Georgeâs Mother, which follows Walter Benn Michaels in suggesting that the recent critical attention paid to particularities of cultural difference in American studies have come to conflate ideas of class and social position with ideas of culture in ways that have ultimately obscured the presence of genuine historical inequalities in US society. In order to challenge this critical commonplace, I situate Craneâs work within a history of transatlantic cosmopolitanism associated with the ideas of Franz Boas and Matthew Arnold to demonstrate the ways in which Craneâs narratives sought out an experience of the universal within their treatments of the particular
The races of the Old world: a manual of ethnology.
Mode of access: Internet
The Norse-folk; or, A visit to the homes of Norway and Sweden. By Charles Loring Brace ...
x. p., 1 l., [13]-516 p. plates. 19 cm
Asa Gray correspondence : letters from Asa Gray to various individuals,
Various individuals (1838-1931