Description
Book SynopsisAmerican literary realism burgeoned during a period of tremendous technological innovation. Because the realists evinced not only a fascination with this new technology but also an ethos that seems to align itself with science, many have paired the two fields rather unproblematically. But this book demonstrates that many realist writers, from Mark Twain to Stephen Crane, Charles W. Chesnutt to Edith Wharton, felt a great deal of anxiety about the advent of new technologies precisely at the crucial intersection of ethics and language. For these writers, the communication revolution was a troubling phenomenon, not only because of the ways in which the new machines had changed and increased the circulation of language but, more pointedly, because of the ways in which language itself had effectively become a machine: a vehicle perpetuating some of society's most pernicious clichés and stereotypes particularly stereotypes of race in unthinking iteration. This work takes a close look a
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Humbug Talky-Talk: Rhetoric, Ethics, Mechanics in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 2. Stephen Crane’s The Monster: Iteration, Ethics, and the Engine of Convention 3. A Conflict of Languages: The Rhetoric of Reason and the Call to Metaphor in The Conjure Woman 4. On the Brink of Eloquence: Circulation, Silence, and The 'Fitting Word' in The House of Mirth and Ethan Frome 5. Telling the Tale Over Again: Reclaiming Repetition in Winesburg, Ohio and Death in the Woods Conclusion. Notes. Bibliography. Index