The Culture of Sentiment: Race, Gender, and Sentimentality in Nineteenth-century America

Front Cover
Shirley Samuels
Oxford University Press, 1992 - 349 pages
In this important new collection, leading scholars in nineteenth-century American culture re-examine the vexed subject of sentimentality. These essays draw upon a range of interdisciplinary approaches to situate sentimentality in terms of "women's culture" and issues of race, before and after the Civil War. Moving beyond the canonical debates about sentimentality, the collection makes visible the particular racial and gendered forms that define the aesthetics and politics of the American culture of sentiment. The contributors use evidence from American cultural history, American studies, and literary criticism, to examine the process by which nineteenth-century American culture was both produced and contested. They present incisive readings of scenes like an antebellum murder trial, the erotic attention audiences paid to the statues of Hiram Powers, and the engravings of Godey's Ladies Book. In addition, they use the writings of Harriet Jacobs, Mark Twain, James Fenimore Cooper, Pauline Hopkins, W.E.B. DuBois, and Harriet Beecher Stowe, to question the political fables immanent in this literature. More generally, they portray nineteenth-century American sentimentality as a national project - a project about imagining the nation's bodies and the national body. With essays by Lauren Berlant, Ann Fabian, Susan Gillman, Karen Halttunen, Carolyn L. Karcher, Joy Kasson, Amy Schrager Lang, Isabelle Lehuu, Harryette Mullen, Dana Nelson, Lora Romero, Shirley Samuels, Karen Sanchez-Eppler, Lynn Wardley, and Laura Wexler, The Culture of Sentiment significantly reorients the field of nineteenth-century American literature, art, culture, and history. It will be of keen interest to those concernedwith women's studies, American studies, cultural studies, African-American studies, and American history and literature.
 

Contents

Introduction
3
Literary Eavesdropping Domestic Fiction and Educational Reform
9
Competing Narratives of Womanhood in the Murder Trial of Lucretia Chapman
39
Lydia Maria Childs Antislavery Fiction and the Limits of Genre
58
Reading Godeys Ladys Book in Antebellum America
73
The Intersecting Rhetorics of Feminism and Abolition
92
Gender Empire and New Historicism
115
7 Class and the Strategies of Sympathy
128
The Greek Slave
172
11 Sympathy as Strategy in Sedgwicks Hope Leslie
191
The Aesthetics of Sentiment in the Work of Stowe
203
13 The Mulatto Tragic or Triumphant? The NineteenthCentury American Race Melodrama
221
Resistant Orality in Uncle Toms Cabin Our Nig Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl and Beloved
244
Fanny Fern and the Form of Sentiment
265
Notes
283
Contributors
341

The Cultural Problem of Gambling
143
9 The Identity of Slavery
157

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1992)

Shirley Samuels is at Cornell University.

Bibliographic information