The Moral Electricity of Print

Transatlantic Education and the Lima Women's Circuit, 1876-1910

Ronald Briggs author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Vanderbilt University Press

Published:30th Jun '17

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Moral Electricity of Print cover

Moral electricity—a term coined by American transcendentalists in the 1850s to describe the force of nature that was literacy and education in shaping a greater society. This concept wasn't strictly an American idea, of course, and Ronald Briggs introduces us to one of the greatest examples of this power: the literary scene in Lima, Peru, in the nineteenth century.

As Briggs notes in the introduction to The Moral Electricity of Print, ""the ideological glue that holds the American hemisphere together is a hope for the New World as a grand educational project combined with an anxiety about the baleful influence of a politically and morally decadent Old World that dominated literary output through its powerful publishing interests."" The very nature of living as a writer and participating in the literary salons of Lima was, by definition, a revolutionary act that gave voice to the formerly colonized and now liberated people. In the actions of this literary community, as men and women worked toward the same educational goals, we see the birth of a truly independent Latin American literature.

By emphasizing Lima and the connections that linked intellectuals based there to debates and processes in Europe and the US, Briggs makes a seminal contribution to expanding hemispheric American studies from a Latin American (and a Latin Americanist) perspective. He does so through an ambitious reading of a broad group of sources across the Americas, with bold interpretations, always linking back to the Lima group. The narrative is graceful, clear, and direct, all characteristic of Briggs's style"". - William Acree, author of Everyday Reading: Print Culture and Collective Identity in the Rio de la Plata, 1780-1910

ISBN: 9780826521453

Dimensions: 231mm x 154mm x 25mm

Weight: 508g

272 pages