The Genius of Democracy


Fictions of Gender and Citizenship in the United States, 186-1945

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By Victoria Olwell
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
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Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
304

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Description

Victoria Olwell teaches English at the University of Virginia.

Introduction: The Work of Genius Chapter 1. "It Spoke Itself": Genius, Political Speech, and Louisa May Alcott's Work Chapter 2. Genius and the Demise of Radical Publics in Henry James's The Bostonians Chapter 3. Trilby: Double Personality, Intellectual Property, and Mass Genius Chapter 4. Mary Hunter Austin: Genius, Variation, and the Identity Politics of Innovation Chapter 5. Imitation as Circulation: Racial Genius and the Problem of National Culture in Jessie Redmon Fauset's There Is Confusion Coda: Gertrude Stein in Occupied France Notes Bibliography Index Acknowledgments

"A complex and bracing book. Olwell brings together an unusual group of texts, starting with Emerson and Alcott and ending in the Harlem Renaissance. Her choice of authors includes not only a range of well-known and less well-known writers but also a range of subject positions, allowing Olwell to think about race, gender, class, and nation in sustained ways that go well beyond lip service or expected formulations." (Susan S. Williams, Ohio State University)

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