From battlefields rising [electronic resource] : how the Civil War transformed American literature / Randall Fuller.
2011
PS217.C58 F85 2011eb
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Title
From battlefields rising [electronic resource] : how the Civil War transformed American literature / Randall Fuller.
Author
ISBN
9780199711789 (electronic bk.)
0195342305
9780195342307
0195342305
9780195342307
Published
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2011.
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (x, 251 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
PS217.C58 F85 2011eb
Summary
When Confederate troops fired on Fort Sumter in April of 1861, Walt Whitman declared it "the volcanic upheaval of the nation"--the bloody inception of a war that would dramatically alter the shape and character of American culture along with its political, racial, and social landscape. Prior to the war, America's leading writers had been integral to helping the young nation imagine itself, assert its beliefs, and realize its immense potential. When the Civil War erupted, it forced them to witness not only unimaginable human carnage on the battlefield, but also the disintegration of the foundational symbolic order they had helped to create. The war demanded new frameworks for understanding the world and new forms of communication that could engage with the immensity of the conflict. It fostered both social and cultural experimentation. From Battlefields Rising explores the profound impact of the war on writers including Walt Whitman, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Herman Melville, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Emily Dickinson, and Frederick Douglass. As the writers of the time grappled with the war's impact on the individual and the national psyche, their responses multiplied and transmuted. Whitman's poetry and prose, for example, was chastened and deepened by his years spent ministering to wounded soldiers; off the battlefield, the anguish of war would come to suffuse the austere, elliptical poems that Emily Dickinson was writing; and Hawthorne was rendered silent by his reading of military reports and talks with soldiers. Calling into question every prior presumption and ideal, the war forever changed America's early idealism--and consequently its literature--into something far more ambivalent and raw. Sketching an absorbing group portrait of the period's most important writers, From Battlefields Rising flashes with forgotten historical details and elegant new ideas. It alters previous perceptions about the evolution of American literature and how Americans have understood and expressed their common history. --Book Jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [225]-243) and index.
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Table of Contents
Introduction: Emerson's dream
Beat! beat! drums!
Concord
Shiloh
Telling it slant
Port Royal
Fathers and sons
Phantom limbs
The man without a country
In a gloomy world
Heaven.
Beat! beat! drums!
Concord
Shiloh
Telling it slant
Port Royal
Fathers and sons
Phantom limbs
The man without a country
In a gloomy world
Heaven.