Duke University Press
Interior States: Institutional Consciousness and the Inner Life of Democracy in the Antebellum United States
Interior States: Institutional Consciousness and the Inner Life of Democracy in the Antebellum United States
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In the late eighteenth century and early nineteenth, as discourses of interiority gained prominence, so did powerful counter-narratives. Castiglia reveals the flamboyant pages of antebellum popular fiction to be an archive of unruly democratic aspirations. Through close readings of works by Maria Monk and George Lippard, Walt Whitman and Timothy Shay Arthur, Hannah Webster Foster and Hannah Crafts, and Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville, Castiglia highlights a refusal to be reformed or self-contained. In antebellum authors' representations of nervousness, desire, appetite, fantasy, and imagination, he finds democratic strivings that refused to disappear. Taking inspiration from those writers and turning to the present, Castiglia advocates a humanism-without-humans that, denied the adjudicative power of interiority, promises to release democracy from its inner life and to return it to the public sphere where U.S. citizens may yet create unprecedented possibilities for social action.
Author: Christopher Castiglia
Publisher: Duke University Press
Published: 11/11/2008
Pages: 400
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.24lbs
Size: 9.20h x 6.16w x 0.91d
ISBN: 9780822342670
Review Citation(s):
Chronicle of Higher Education 03/13/2009 pg. 18
About the Author
Christopher Castiglia is Professor of English at the Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of Bound and Determined: Captivity, Culture-Crossing, and White Womanhood from Mary Rowlandson to Patty Hearst and a co-editor of Walt Whitman's temperance novel Franklin Evans; or, the Inebriate, also published by Duke University Press.
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