DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

A Theoretical Approach to Modern American History and Literature

An Issue of Reconfiguration and Re-representation

W Lawrence Hogue author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Anthem Press

Published:10th Jan '20

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

A Theoretical Approach to Modern American History and Literature cover

A reconfiguration of modern American history and a re-representation of the modern American novel

A reconfiguration of modern American history, showing how multiple movements at different times challenged a singularly defined modern America, and a re-representation of the modern American novel, accenting the different critical literary voices to effect a fundamental recasting of the modern Americanist paradigm.

This book reconfigures the history of modern America, showing how multiple and, at times, vulnerable social, economic, literary, and political movements, levels, divisions, and conditions such as the emergent middle class, the labor movement, the Progressive Movement, the socialist and communist parties, the Women’s movements, the NAACP, the Garvey movement, Asian and Native American resistance movements, writers, artists, and intellectuals seized upon social, gender, economic, and racial inequalities and challenged a singularly defined modern America. This book re-represents the modern American novel, accenting the different critical literary voices that come out of the mainstream consumer society but also out of the various unequal social, economic, gender, and political movements and situations. In including racial, gender, sexual, colonial, class, and ethnic others—who reject the rigidity, the repression, the racial and ethnic stereotyping, the external and internal colonialism, the complication/rejection of the past/nature, and the violence of the institutionalized, conformist norm—in a discussion of the modern American novel, it effects a fundamental recasting of the modern Americanist paradigm, one that is de-centered, richer, more complex, and more diverse.

“Hogue provides an accessible, well-argued and well-researched analysis of modernist US fiction as a resonating chamber for the growing inequalities that shaped modern America. Focusing on both canonical and less canonical texts from The Great Gatsby to Younghill Kang’s East Goes West, the book’s extensive close readings flesh out social and political counternarratives that decades of critical neglect have flattened out and incorporated into mainstream, inert readings of US history.” — Christian Moraru, Class of 1949 Distinguished Professor in the Humanities and Professor of American Literature and Critical Theory, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, USA


“A Theoretical Approach to Modern American History and Literature offers readers a unique rearticulation of modern American history and literature, studying novels written by a diverse group of writers. This monumental book celebrates America as a space of cross-alliances that embraces alternative modes of social ordering in the United States.” — E. Lâle Demirtürk, Professor of African American Literature, Bilkent University, Turkey


“W. Lawrence Hogue’s A Theoretical Approach to Modern American History and Literature energizes the prevalent discourses on American modernism by examining the competing and diverse cacophony of literary voices emerging with the plurality of political, social and economic movements and organizations in the 1920s and 1930s. The result is an expanded understanding of the historical circumstances underpinning modern literature as well as a more comprehensive vision of that literature. Connecting race, ethnicity, class and gender in a theoretically astute critical assessment, this study brilliantly recalibrates the impact of state apparatuses and global politics on the literary production and artistic methodologies of culturally diverse authors not frequently placed together but whose combined presence contributed to the making of modernism.” — Thadious M. Davis, Geraldine R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought and Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania, USA

ISBN: 9781785272592

Dimensions: 229mm x 153mm x 26mm

Weight: 454g

302 pages