Research Catalog
Reconstituting authority : American fiction in the province of the law, 1880-1920 / William E. Moddelmog.
- Title
- Reconstituting authority : American fiction in the province of the law, 1880-1920 / William E. Moddelmog.
- Author
- Moddelmog, William E., 1961-
- Publication
- Iowa City : University of Iowa Press, c2000.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Request in advance | PS374.L34 M63 2000 | Off-site |
Holdings
Details
- Description
- x, 276 p.; 23 cm.
- Summary
- "In Reconstituting Authority, William Moddelmog explores the ways in which American law and literature converged in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Through close readings of significant texts from the era, he reveals not only how novelists invoked specific legal principles and ideals in their fictions but also how they sought to reconceptualize the boundaries of law and literature in ways that transformed previous versions of both legal and literary authority." "Moddelmog does not assume a sharp distinction between literary and legal institutions and practices but shows how writers imagined the two fields as engaged in the same cultural process. He argues that because the law was instrumental in setting the terms by which concepts such as race, gender, nationhood, ownership, and citizenship were defined in the nineteenth century, authors challenging those definitions had to engage the law on its own terrain: to place their work in a dialogue with the law by telling stories that were already authorized (though perhaps suppressed) by legal institutions."--Jacket.
- Uniform Title
- Project Muse UPCC books
- Subject
- Genre/Form
- Criticism, interpretation, etc.
- History
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (p. [253]-268) and index.
- Processing Action (note)
- committed to retain
- Contents
- Introduction. Professionalism in Law and Literature -- Pt. 1. (Mis)Rule of Law. Ch. 1. "Official" Narratives of William Dean Howells. Ch. 2. Helen Hunt Jackson and the Romance of Indian Nationhood. Ch. 3. Narrating Citizenship in Pauline Hopkins's Contending Forces -- Pt. 2. Authority of Property. Ch. 4. Charles Chesnutt's Fictions of Ownership. Ch. 5. Privacy and Subjectivity in Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth. Ch. 6. Theodore Dreiser's Progressive Nostalgia.
- ISBN
- 0877457360 (acid-free paper)
- LCCN
- ^^^00044743^
- OCLC
- 44420471
- Owning Institutions
- Harvard Library