After Franklin: The Emergence of Autobiography in Post-revolutionary America, 1780-1830University Press of New England, 2001 - 241 páginas Although much has been written about Benjamin Franklin’s Autobiography, other writers of what Stephen Arch calls “self-biographies” in post-revolutionary America have received scant scholarly attention. This rich variety of texts dramatically shows the complex nature of 19th-century concepts of identity. Arguing that “autobiography” is a modern invention, Arch shows its emergence in the older, conservative self-biographies of Alexander Graydon, Benjamin Rush, and Ethan Allen and in the newer, more progressive, and even radical self-biographies of K. White, Elizabeth Fisher, Stephen Burroughs, and John Fitch. Describing the evolution of a concept as elastic as “the self” is not easy, but Arch offers a unique and imaginative study of the emergence of a specifically modern American identity. |
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Página 55
... Graydon talks about his ideological enemies in ways that his colleagues at the conservative Port Folio seven years later still found " bold and unpalatable . " In an issue of that magazine published just prior to Graydon's death , the ...
... Graydon talks about his ideological enemies in ways that his colleagues at the conservative Port Folio seven years later still found " bold and unpalatable . " In an issue of that magazine published just prior to Graydon's death , the ...
Página 57
... Graydon's Memoirs represents a number of texts in the early re- public that deserve to be recovered and perpetuated ... Graydon , we cannot listen to many writers of the post - Revolutionary generation who did not speak in the emergent ...
... Graydon's Memoirs represents a number of texts in the early re- public that deserve to be recovered and perpetuated ... Graydon , we cannot listen to many writers of the post - Revolutionary generation who did not speak in the emergent ...
Página 69
... Graydon himself becomes not just the epitome of failure accord- ing to the new standards of the republic but also the epitome of the dif- ficult struggle to resist the ... Graydon's Memoirs is his argument that the Alexander Graydon 69.
... Graydon himself becomes not just the epitome of failure accord- ing to the new standards of the republic but also the epitome of the dif- ficult struggle to resist the ... Graydon's Memoirs is his argument that the Alexander Graydon 69.
Contenido
4 | 38 |
Travels through Life | 74 |
Ethan Allen and the Republican Self | 93 |
Derechos de autor | |
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After Franklin: The Emergence of Autobiography in Post-revolutionary America ... Stephen Carl Arch Vista de fragmentos - 2001 |
Términos y frases comunes
Alexander Graydon Allen's Narrative American Literature American Revolution argue autobiography behavior Benjamin Franklin Benjamin Rush biography Boston British Burroughs Burroughs's Cambridge captivity Cathy Davidson character Charles Brockden Brown claims conception counterfeit course Crèvecoeur's critics culture discourse Early American eccentric eighteenth century emergence Emerson Ethan Allen example experience father Federalist fictional Fisher Fitch Fliegelman genre of autobiography Graydon's Memoirs Grimes human ideas identity imagines independent individual insists invention James James's Jefferson John Adams John Fitch language Letters liberty Library of America Literary History mind modern moral Nantucket Nantucket Island narrator nature nineteenth century novel original Oxford University Press P. T. Barnum Philadelphia political Princeton printed published readers remarks Reprint republican Revolutionary America romantic Rush's says self-biography selfhood sense sentimental singular social society steamboat Stephen Burroughs story tells texts Thomas Thoreau tion tradition Travels virtue White William women writing written wrote York