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9780271032917 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Culture and Commerce of the Early American Novel:

Reading the Atlantic World-System
  • ISBN-13: 9780271032917
  • Publisher: PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
    Imprint: PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • By Stephen Shapiro
  • Price: AUD $77.99
  • Stock: 0 in stock
  • Availability: This book is temporarily out of stock, order will be despatched as soon as fresh stock is received.
  • Local release date: 14/07/2009
  • Format: Paperback 384 pages Weight: 0g
  • Categories: History of the Americas [HBJK]
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Taking his cue from Philadelphia-born novelist Charles Brockden Brown’s Annals of Europe and America, which contends that America is shaped most noticeably by the international struggle between Great Britain and France for control of the world trade market, Stephen Shapiro charts the advent, decline, and reinvigoration of the early American novel. That the American novel “sprang so unexpectedly into published existence during the 1790s” may be a reflection of the beginning of the end of Franco-British supremacy and of the power of a middle class riding the crest of a new world economic system.

Shapiro’s world-systems approach is a relatively new methodology for literary studies, but it brings two particularly useful features to the table. First, it refines the conceptual frameworks for analyzing cultural and social history, such as the rise in sentimentalism, in relation to a long-wave economic history of global commerce; second, it fosters a new model for a comparative American studies across time. Rather than relying on contiguous time, a world-systems approach might compare the cultural production of one region to another at the same location within the recurring cycle in an economic reconfiguration. Shapiro offers a way of thinking about the causes for the emergence of the American novel that suggests a fresh approach to the paradigms shaping American studies.


Contents

Acknowledgments

1. Method and Misperception: The Paradigm Problem of the Early American Novel

2. The Geoculture of the Anglo-French Eighteenth-Century World-System

3. The Re-export Republic and the Rise of the Early American Novel

4. The Paradox of the Public Sphere: Franklin’s Autobiography and the Institution of Ideology

5. Wieland and the Problem of Counterinstitutionality

6. Arthur Mervyn and the Racial Revolution of Narrative Consciousness

Afterword: Early Nineteenth-Century American Studies and the World-Systems Perspective

Bibliography

Index



“Shapiro’s meaty introduction similarly engages broad questions of method, periodization, and geography. He also gives his readers a very clear understanding of his methodology, intervention in, and vision for the future of, American literary scholarship.”

—gretchen j. woertendyke, Huntington Library Quarterly

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