The Literary Vocation of Henry Adams
Format:Paperback
Publisher:The University of North Carolina Press
Published:30th May '11
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
In the mid-1880s, Henry Adams committed himself to a posture that has since been associated with his name: neglected patrician, doomsayer, literary man whose bereavement at his wife's suicide confirmed his abandonment of an active public life. Adams (1838-1918) defined himself as other than contemporary Americans. Yet he also cast himself as the Republic's last true patriot, and beneath his reticence lay the firm belief that he was the one man who could save America -- if only his voice were heard.
This insightful book focuses on the relationship between Adams and his audience, emphasizing Adams's rhetorical strategies in his effort to shape a dialogue with his readers. Throughout his literary career, Adams struggled to redefine America's role as a nation of millennial promise. All the while, he was faced with mounting evidence that his country was rapidly squandering its opportunity to act as a redemptive force. William Decker explores Adams's ambition to impress this view of the Republic on the national mind and his persistent desire to create a text that would direct, both by its rational persuasiveness and by its symbological appeal, the course of an America destined to become a great world power.
After his wife's suicide in 1885, Adams increasingly felt the burden of what he perceived as a historical and cosmic opposition to the millennial America in whose advocacy he had originally taken up his vocation. He revised his authorial ends and means, assuming ever more clearly the part of the voice crying in the wilderness. Although he would routinely despair of his country's public destiny, his pen would remain active as long as he lived, narrowly affirming the redemptive historical possibility.
The Literary Vocation of Henry Adams is a comprehensive reading of Adams's works, giving careful attention to texts that have generally been considered minor as well as to better-known works like U.S. histories and Mont Saint Michel and Chartres. Discussions of Adams's most widely read and appreciated work, The Education of Henry Adams, frame Decker's arguments. He examines the Education as the valedictory statement and enactment of Adams's ambitions as an author--and as the ultimate measure of his success.
William Merrill Decker has written an important and enlightening study of Adams as a writer and thinker. . . . Decker's book is now one of the basic beginning points for anyone hoping to understand Henry Adams.--American Studies|""Decker has written an absolutely superb book. . . . He sees Adams's works comprehensively, brilliantly identifies the nature of the argument, analyzes the components of Adams's complex vision, and shows how those components fuse and how they diverge, all the while advancing his revelation of Adams's career.""--James M. Cox, Dartmouth College|""This book is simply a brilliant reassessment of Adams' writings in the context of their rhetorical idea. It will become a seminal work for students of Adams, and it will undoubtedly have an important bearing on the direction of literary criticism in general.""--American Literature
ISBN: 9780807865293
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 333g
336 pages
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