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10 The Business of Marriage, Pluralized: Mormonism and Money in Button’s Inn
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Molly Ball
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Introduction: Literary Tourgée 1
-
I Race
- 1 Gothic Reconstruction: Hawthorne’s House in Tourgée’s Toinette and A Royal Gentleman 19
- 2 Tourgée’s A Fool’s Errand and the Limits of White Radicalism 32
- 3 “Queer Synecdoche” Tourgée’s Bricks without Straw and Black Kinship 44
- 4 Reparations and Passing in Tourgée’s Pactolus Prime 57
- 5 The True Friendship of Charles W. Chesnutt and Albion W. Tourgée 70
- 6 “Their Position Must Be Mined” Tourgée in Charles Chesnutt’s Career-Long Engagement with White Readers 84
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II Citizenship
- 7 Reimagining the Republic: Tourgée on Citizenship 97
- 8 Tourgée, Democracy, Romance, and the Art of Fiction 110
- 9 Exodian Allegories of Incomplete Emancipation in Bricks without Straw 124
- 10 The Business of Marriage, Pluralized: Mormonism and Money in Button’s Inn 138
- 11 Tourgée’s New Realism: Disciplinary Reparation and the Quest for Racial Justice 151
- 12 With Gauge and Swallow, Attorneys: Tourgée’s Legal Romance 165
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III Nation
- 13 “I Don’t Care a Rag for the Union as It Was” Amputation, the Past, and the Work of the Freedmen’s Bureau in Bricks without Straw 181
- 14 Tracking Redress in the West: The Railroad in Tourgée’s Figs and Thistles and Ruiz de Burton’s The Squatter and the Don 194
- 15 The Literary Lost Cause of Albion Tourgée: The Project of Our Continent 207
- 16 Tourgée on the Dangers of Reconciliation: Revenge in the Reconstruction-Era Novels 223
- 17 Thomas Dixon, Albion Tourgée, and the False Balance of the Civil War 236
- Afterword 251
- Albion W. Tourgée: A Chronology 259
- Acknowledgments 263
- Selected Bibliography 265
- Contributors 269
- Index 273
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xi
- Introduction: Literary Tourgée 1
-
I Race
- 1 Gothic Reconstruction: Hawthorne’s House in Tourgée’s Toinette and A Royal Gentleman 19
- 2 Tourgée’s A Fool’s Errand and the Limits of White Radicalism 32
- 3 “Queer Synecdoche” Tourgée’s Bricks without Straw and Black Kinship 44
- 4 Reparations and Passing in Tourgée’s Pactolus Prime 57
- 5 The True Friendship of Charles W. Chesnutt and Albion W. Tourgée 70
- 6 “Their Position Must Be Mined” Tourgée in Charles Chesnutt’s Career-Long Engagement with White Readers 84
-
II Citizenship
- 7 Reimagining the Republic: Tourgée on Citizenship 97
- 8 Tourgée, Democracy, Romance, and the Art of Fiction 110
- 9 Exodian Allegories of Incomplete Emancipation in Bricks without Straw 124
- 10 The Business of Marriage, Pluralized: Mormonism and Money in Button’s Inn 138
- 11 Tourgée’s New Realism: Disciplinary Reparation and the Quest for Racial Justice 151
- 12 With Gauge and Swallow, Attorneys: Tourgée’s Legal Romance 165
-
III Nation
- 13 “I Don’t Care a Rag for the Union as It Was” Amputation, the Past, and the Work of the Freedmen’s Bureau in Bricks without Straw 181
- 14 Tracking Redress in the West: The Railroad in Tourgée’s Figs and Thistles and Ruiz de Burton’s The Squatter and the Don 194
- 15 The Literary Lost Cause of Albion Tourgée: The Project of Our Continent 207
- 16 Tourgée on the Dangers of Reconciliation: Revenge in the Reconstruction-Era Novels 223
- 17 Thomas Dixon, Albion Tourgée, and the False Balance of the Civil War 236
- Afterword 251
- Albion W. Tourgée: A Chronology 259
- Acknowledgments 263
- Selected Bibliography 265
- Contributors 269
- Index 273