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Title:
The Cambridge companion to American literature and the body / edited by Travis M. Foster.
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press,
Copyright Date:
2022
Description:
xv, 279 pages ; 24 cm.
Subject:
American literature--History and criticism.
Human body in literature.
American literature.
Human body in literature.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Literary criticism.
Other Authors:
Foster, Travis M., editor.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Ecocriticism and the body / Delia Byrnes. Sentimentalism and the feeling body / Claudia Stokes -- Slavery, disability and the Black body/white body complex in the American slave narrative / Maurice Wallace -- Monstrous bodies of the American gothic / Agnieszka Soltysik Monnet -- Bodies at war / Colleen Glenney Boggs -- Decolonizing the body in multiethnic American fiction / Sony Coráñez Bolton -- Science fiction's humanoid bodies of the future / Frances Tran -- Contemporary North American transgender literature: realness, fantasy, and the body / Stephanie Clare -- Feminist theory, feminist criticism, and the sex/gender distinction / Christine "Xine" Yao -- Reading bodies and textual materialities / Thomas Constantinesco -- How to read disabled bodies in history / Erica Fretwell -- How to read disabled bodies now : crip of color critique / Anna Hinton -- Health humanities, illness, and the body in American literature / Lindsey Grubbs -- The indigenous body in American literature / Sean Teuton -- The Black body and the reading of race / Christine Okoth -- Ecocriticism and the body / Delia Byrnes.
Summary:
"This volume provides students of American literature with models and methods for approaching the question of embodiment. It underscores the body as at once dynamic, shaping our experience of the world through complex interplay between social and biological influences, and intersectional, resisting attempts for discrete analysis at every turn. By highlighting these two qualities, The Cambridge Companion to American Literature and the Body foregrounds the body's enmeshed interspersal throughout core concerns of American literary studies, including those focused on race, gender, sexuality, history, and ecology. Despite this range of fields, the insights from one particular field--disability studies--comprise the volume's most prominent conceptual resource, providing a thread linking essays on topics as seemingly varied as sentimental fiction, slave narratives, the history of reading, and ecocriticism. The significance of disability studies to discussions of embodiment in American literature shouldn't be surprising. Disability, illness, and chronic pain were among the first topics within Americanist criticism to veer away from a Cartesian mind/body split that otherwise frequently manifested in starker and more binary terms than even Descartes envisioned. To take just one example, William Joseph Long's 1913 American Literature: A Study of the Men and the Books that in the Earlier and Later Times Reflect the American Spirit almost exclusively speaks of authors as disembodied creators. The notable exception occurs when Long turns to those writers experiencing sickness and chronic pain, such as Puritan Michael Wigglesworth, whose experience as a "lifelong sufferer from disease" finds itself reflected in the "powerful but morbid imagination" of his poetry. Despite the limitations of his ableist worldview, the disabled bodies of his subjects force Long into a nascent understanding of how bodies and creative imaginations collaborate to produce visions of the world that influence readers' perceptions and understandings"-- Provided by publisher.
Series:
Cambridge companions to literature
ISBN:
1108815294
9781108815291
1108841929
9781108841924
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1280274409
LCCN:
2021053926
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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