Toward a Female Genealogy of Transcendentalism
Phyllis Cole editor Jana L Argersinger editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Published:15th Aug '14
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Traditional histories of the American transcendentalist movement begin in Ralph Waldo Emerson’s terms: describing a rejection of college books and church pulpits in favor of the individual power of “Man Thinking.” This essay collection asks how women who lacked the privileges of both college and clergy rose to thought. For them, reading alone and conversing together were the primary means of growth, necessarily in private and informal spaces both overlapping with those of the men and apart from them. But these were means to achieving literary, aesthetic, and political authority—indeed, to claiming utopian possibility for women as a whole.
Toward a Female Genealogy of Transcendentalism is a project of both archaeology and reinterpretation. Many of its seventeen distinguished and rising scholars work from newly recovered archives, and all offer fresh readings of understudied topics and texts. First quickened by the 2010 bicentennial of Margaret Fuller’s birth, the project reaches beyond Fuller to her female predecessors, contemporaries, and successors throughout the nineteenth century who contributed to or grew from the transcendentalist movement.
Geographic scope also widens—from the New England base to national and transatlantic spheres. A shared goal is to understand this “genealogy” within a larger history of American women writers; no absolute boundaries divide idealism from sentiment, romantics from realists, or white discourse from black. Primary-text interludes invite readers into the ongoing task of discovering and interpreting transcendentally affiliated women. This collection recognizes the vibrant contributions women made to a major literary movement and will appeal to both scholars and general readers.
An astonishing record of scholarship that examines transcendentalism from the perspective of women writers. The twenty essays in this collection (and the ‘interludes’ of primary texts interwoven throughout the volume) are proof that women contributed directly and positively to the movement of transcendentalism. No one who reads these outstanding essays and engaging primary materials will doubt that fact.
* editor of Stowe in Her Own Time: A Biographical Chronicle of Her Life, Drawn from Recollections, Interviews, and Memoirs by Family, Friends, and Associates *Gathering scores of interpretive essays on transcendentalist women and their sympathetic fellow travelers and interspersing revelatory primary materials among this scholarship, Argersinger and Cole deliver a book that delights and instructs at every turn and on many levels. This is a signal achievement and will redirect the study of both transcendentalism and American romanticism generally.
* author of American Transcendentalism: A History *As this exceptional set of essays reveals, [women] were not merely peripheral players, but active contributors to and practitioners of Transcendentalism from its inception.
* American StudiISBN: 9780820346779
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
448 pages