This dissertation examines the ways in which literary representations of readers and scenes of reading comment on societal disruptions during the Civil War. I contend that the war’s cultural transformations and the anxieties they produced—such as fear of African American upward mobility—were taken up by contemporary writers through the theme of reading. I demonstrate that the figure of the reader reveals how individuals of different social classes, genders, or racial backgrounds grappled with social and cultural norms, either straining against or reconciling themselves to them. I focus on those types of reading that either broke with antebellum conventions or gained visibility during the war, such as letter reading or the reading of casualt...
In this dissertation, I build on recent scholarship on the Civil War’s remapping of gender and sexua...
In this project, I argue that in the years leading up to the American Civil War, America became Brit...
Literary scholars give far less attention to the Civil War and especially Reconstruction than do his...
This dissertation examines the ways in which literary representations of readers and scenes of readi...
This dissertation examines the ways in which literary representations of readers and scenes of readi...
Probing the periodic ceasura between antebellum and postbellum literature, this dissertation locates...
Imagined Literacies argues that antebellum ideologies of racial difference—the ways that early Ameri...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityWriters of modern American fiction live presented the heroines of st...
Scenes of Reading: Forgotten Antebellum Readers, Self-Representation, and the Transatlantic Reprint ...
“Revolutionary Representations in Antebellum Periodicals” examines invocations of the American Revol...
In this dissertation, I build on recent scholarship on the Civil War’s remapping of gender and sexua...
In this project, I argue that in the years leading up to the American Civil War, America became Brit...
Literary scholars give far less attention to the Civil War and especially Reconstruction than do his...
This dissertation examines the ways in which literary representations of readers and scenes of readi...
This dissertation examines the ways in which literary representations of readers and scenes of readi...
Probing the periodic ceasura between antebellum and postbellum literature, this dissertation locates...
Imagined Literacies argues that antebellum ideologies of racial difference—the ways that early Ameri...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
This thesis explores the political evolution and ideological impact of nineteenth-century American p...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston UniversityWriters of modern American fiction live presented the heroines of st...
Scenes of Reading: Forgotten Antebellum Readers, Self-Representation, and the Transatlantic Reprint ...
“Revolutionary Representations in Antebellum Periodicals” examines invocations of the American Revol...
In this dissertation, I build on recent scholarship on the Civil War’s remapping of gender and sexua...
In this project, I argue that in the years leading up to the American Civil War, America became Brit...
Literary scholars give far less attention to the Civil War and especially Reconstruction than do his...