Traveling Traditions
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Edited by:
Erik Redling
About this book
This study seeks to fill a major gap in the fields of Nineteenth-Century American and British Studies by examining how nineteenth-century intellectuals shaped and re-shaped aesthetic traditions across the Atlantic Ocean. Special attention is paid to a group of salient cultural concepts, such as artist-as-hero, imagination, the picturesque, reform, simultaneity, and seriality. Although embedded in a particular aesthetic tradition, these concepts travel from one culture to another and are transformed along their transatlantic journeys. The purpose of this book is to explore the roles of these ‘traveling concepts’ within the realm of transatlantic cultures and to trace their at times surprising paths within ever-widening transnational intellectual networks.
Author / Editor information
Erik Redling, Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, Germany.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Preface
vii - Part I: The American Renaissance Revisited
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1. Transatlantic Literary Networks: E. A. Poe from Germany to Russia to Chicago
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2. American Realism in Its Transatlantic Context
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3. Genteel Pragmatism in Nineteenth-Century America and Great Britain
35 - Part II: Cultural Authority and Transatlantic Aesthetics
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4. The (Traveling) Reform Tradition in Nineteenth-Century Anglo- America
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5. Of Heroes and Mockingbirds: Transatlantic Translations and the Struggle between ‘High’ and ‘Low’ Cultures in Nineteenth-Century America
63 -
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6. The Transatlantic Dante in the Nineteenth Century: Literary Authority and Reception Histories
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7. The Artist as Hero: Nineteenth-Century Concepts of Authorship in a Transatlantic Perspective
95 - Part III: Broadening the Genteel Circle: Race and Gender
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8. Frederick Douglass, Photography, and Imagination
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9. Romantic Folk Culture and The Souls of Black Folk: Framing the Beginnings of African-American Culture Studies in Cross-Atlantic Traveling Concepts
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10. Fuller, Feminism, Foreign Correspondence
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11. Byronic Heroines and Darwinian Types: Southern Women’s (Post-) Bellum Identity Construction
171 - Part IV: The Medium is the Message: Transatlantic Media Networks
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12. Stereoscopy and the Global Picturesque
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13. On Transatlantic Simultaneity and Misunderstanding Telegraphy
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14. (Un)Settling North America: The Yankee in the Writings of John Neal and Thomas Chandler Haliburton
231 -
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15. Transatlantic Politics as Serial Networks in the German-American City Mystery Novel, 1850–1855
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Contributors
267 -
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Index
271
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