
America the Middlebrow
Jaime Harker
(Author)Description
With the rise of middlebrow institutions and readers came the need for the creation of the new category of authorship. Harker contends that these new writers appropriated and adapted a larger tradition of women's activism and literary activity to their own needs and practices. Like sentimental women writers and readers of the 1850s, these authors saw fiction as a means of reforming and transforming society. Like their Progressive Era forebears, they replaced religious icons with nationalistic images of progress and pragmatic ideology. In the interwar period, this mode of authorship was informed by Deweyan pragmatist aesthetics, which insisted that art provided vicarious experience that could help create humane, democratic societies.
Drawing on letters from publishers, editors, agents, and authors, America the Middlebrow traces four key moments in this distinctive culture of letters through the careers of Dorothy Canfield, Jessie Fauset, Pearl Buck, and Josephine Herbst. Both an exploration of a virtually invisible culture of letters and a challenge to monolithic paradigms of modernism, the book offers fresh insight into the ongoing tradition of political domestic fiction that flourished between the wars.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Massachusetts Press |
Publish Date | June 20, 2007 |
Pages | 192 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781558495975 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 6.4 X 0.6 inches | 0.6 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"America the Middlebrow is, first, a readable and thought-provoking reclamation of four important mid-century women writers, solidly in the feminist literary tradition that Elaine Showalter defined early on as gynocriticism. It is also a serious scholarly challenge to the hegemony of traditional modernist aesthetics, a vital reclamation of the novel's political and persuasive power and of its central place in American culture, and a careful argument for more respectful attention to general readers. This captivating book will move the conversation about women readers and writers forward significantly with its exploration of the neglected historical space between nineteenth-century and contemporary book club women."--Cecilia Konchar Farr, author of Reading Oprah:
How Oprah's Book Club Changed the Way America Reads
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