The Literary Gift in Early America
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Stanford University Press
Publishing:18th Mar '25
£66.00
This title is due to be published on 18th March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
![The Literary Gift in Early America cover](https://cdn.theportobellobookshop.com/img/9781503639676.jpg)
Some of the most meaningful moments in early American literature relied on historical patterns of gift exchange, David Faflik argues in this compelling book. Gift exchange kept a surprising variety of literary objects in circulation across the diverse societies, economies, and cultures of the Americas, from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries.
From the gifting of a Narragansett grammar as a foundational event in the project of colonization in New England, to the use of Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack in the classrooms of an independent Brazil, to Catharine Maria Sedgwick's fictions framing literature as the object of middle-class gifting, chapters offer an interdisciplinary perspective on book history and literary history in the United States and beyond. Faflik contends that it is because of the wild ways in which books circulated as gifts that works by Franklin, New England colonist Roger Williams, Sedgwick, Walt Whitman, and Emily Dickinson resisted the generic conventions of their day. Offering a revisionist account of how literary meaning is made, The Literary Gift in Early America calls for closer attention to the historical patterns of literary give and take in the Americas.
"Faflik dislodges what we think we know about the terms 'gift' and 'book' beyond gift books. He explores these themes through a broad and interesting set of literary and cultural material, with fresh and exciting research on understudied texts."
—Jonathan Senchyne, University of Wisconsin-Madison
"This is an elegant, insightful, innovative, and sustained argument for the importance of gifting as a foundational circulatory mode for literature before modernism. Gifting, far from being a more satisfying economy apart from capitalist exchanges, emerges as complicated and fraught."
—Eliza Richards, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
ISBN: 9781503639676
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
326 pages