
Description
In Ashes of the Mind, Martin Griffin examines the work of five Northerners--three poets and two fiction writers--who over a period of four decades tried to understand and articulate the landscape of memory in postwar America, and in particular in that part of the nation that could, with most justification, claim the victory of its beliefs and values. The book begins with an examination of the rhetorical grandeur of James Russell Lowell's Harvard Commemoration Ode, ranges across Herman Melville's ironic war poetry, Henry James's novel of North-South reconciliation, The Bostonians, and Ambrose Bierce's short stories, and ends with the bitter meditation on race and nation presented by Paul Laurence Dunbar's elegy "Robert Gould Shaw." Together these texts reveal how a group of representative Northern writers were haunted in different ways by the memory of the
conflict and its fraught legacy.
Griffin traces a concern with individual and community loss, ambivalence toward victory, and a changing politics of commemoration in the writings of Lowell, Melville, James, Bierce, and Dunbar. What links these very different authors is a Northern memory of the war that became more complex and more compromised as the century went on, often replacing a sense of justification and achievement with a perception of irony and failed promise.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Massachusetts Press |
Publish Date | February 11, 2009 |
Pages | 280 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781558496903 |
Dimensions | 9.0 X 6.0 X 0.8 inches | 0.8 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
, author of The Political Work of Northern Women Writers and the Civil War, 1850-1872
"Griffin analyzes, for the first time, how Northern writers dealt with their lack of equivalent "mission" and materials with which to construct any alternative narratives about the war's meaning. . . . Highly Recommended."--Choice
"It is to Griffin's great credit that Ashes of the Mind succeeds as a professional work of history while managing avoid most of the 'lit-crit' jargon that sometimes makes literary criticism inaccessible to anyone other than its author. In the end, Griffin's case is arguable, itself an achievement in a discourse that heretofore has existed only in a vacuum."--New England Quarterly
"The book makes an important contribution to the much-explored genre of collective memory studies by highlighting such naysayers as Bierce, Dunbar, and The Bostonians (the latter two barely mentioned in Daniel Aaron's The Unwritten War: American Writers and the Civil War [1973])."--American Studies
Earn by promoting books