img Leseprobe Leseprobe

Guilty Pleasures

Popular Novels and American Audiences in the Long Nineteenth Century

Hugh McIntosh

EPUB
ca. 74,99

University of Virginia Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Englische Sprachwissenschaft / Literaturwissenschaft

Beschreibung

Guilty pleasures in one’s reading habits are nothing new. Late-nineteenth-century American literary culture even championed the idea that popular novels need not be great. Best-selling novels arrived in the public sphere as at once beloved and contested objects, an ambivalence that reflected and informed America’s cultural insecurity. This became a matter of nationhood as well as aesthetics: the amateurism of popular narratives resonated with the discourse of new nationhood.

In Guilty Pleasures, Hugh McIntosh examines reactions to best-selling fiction in the United States from 1850 to 1920, including reader response to such best-sellers as Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Ben Hur, and Trilby as well as fictional representations—from Trollope to Baldwin—of American culture’s lack of artistic greatness. Drawing on a transatlantic archive of contemporary criticism, urban display, parody, and advertising, Guilty Pleasures thoroughly documents how the conflicted attitude toward popular novels shaped these ephemeral modes of response. Paying close attention to this material history of novel reading, McIntosh reveals how popular fiction’s unique status as socially saturating and aesthetically questionable inspired public reflection on what it meant to belong to a flawed national community.

Weitere Titel von diesem Autor
Weitere Titel in dieser Kategorie
Cover 1913
Jean-Michel Rabate
Cover A New Way of Seeing
Michael Sarnowski
Cover Absolute Fiction
Justin Prystash
Cover Sphere of Understanding
Ekaterina Velmezova
Cover Before Adam
Zenith Crescent Moon Press
Cover Binding Media
Élika Ortega
Cover Aquí se habla
Adam Schwartz
Cover The Irish Bildungsroman
Matthew L. Reznicek

Kundenbewertungen

Schlagwörter

individualism and authorship, national identity, reading parody, sensational popular culture, public taste