Description

Book Synopsis

Poe's Difference argues that Edgar Allan Poe has much more in common with early American, medieval, and ancient writers than with the modern and post-modern ones with whom the writer is so often associated. This book emphasizes Poe's anachronisms to make a number of theoretical, pedagogical, literary historical, and political claims about the backwardness of antebellum U.S. culture. Some time ago Michael Colacurcio issued the challenge that the full case for the Puritan character of Poe's horror' remains to be made. Although going back a good deal further than just to the Puritans, Poe's Difference aspires fully to make precisely this case.



Trade Review
“A dedicated and theme-breaking critic of Poe’s works, R. C. De Prospo challenges Poe’s placement in a multitude of received literary categories: for example, his reputation as a romantic writer (and a derivative one at that) or a prophetic modernist and/or even post-modernist. And was he more ‘American’ than many canonically influential Americanist critics have alleged and thus less in line with his ‘international’ supporters as formerly supposed? De Prospo’s work galvanizes these and other otherwise familiar Poesque topics.” —Louis A. Renza, Emeritus Professor of English, Dartmouth College
“Once upon a time, Poe was ‘Halloween’—a freak with fancies. Redeemed from this, he became first a major romantic and then, with the aid of the French, an epitome of the post-modern, hiding out somewhere in the canon of classic American literature. Time to think again. In R. C. De Prospo’s revisionist account, Poe’s deepest roots are in a number of ancient and venerable traditions, both pagan and Christian, his themes more neo-medieval than post-modern. Brave to challenge the prophets of deconstruction and authorial nonentity, De Prospo’s wide learning and theoretical sophistication are well up to the task.” —Michael Colacurcio, Distinguished Professor of English, University of California, Los Angeles

Table of Contents

Foreword: Poe’s Difference – Acknowledgements – "An Anomaly on the Face of the Earth": Poe’s Reviews – Poe’s Pym/Stevenson’s Jim – Pym, Prometheus, and the Marinere – Afterword: Poe’s Parelcon – Index.

Poes Difference

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    A Hardback by R. C. De Prospo

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      View other formats and editions of Poes Difference by R. C. De Prospo

      Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
      Publication Date: 1/4/2019 12:09:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781433169328, 978-1433169328
      ISBN10: 1433169320

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Poe's Difference argues that Edgar Allan Poe has much more in common with early American, medieval, and ancient writers than with the modern and post-modern ones with whom the writer is so often associated. This book emphasizes Poe's anachronisms to make a number of theoretical, pedagogical, literary historical, and political claims about the backwardness of antebellum U.S. culture. Some time ago Michael Colacurcio issued the challenge that the full case for the Puritan character of Poe's horror' remains to be made. Although going back a good deal further than just to the Puritans, Poe's Difference aspires fully to make precisely this case.



      Trade Review
      “A dedicated and theme-breaking critic of Poe’s works, R. C. De Prospo challenges Poe’s placement in a multitude of received literary categories: for example, his reputation as a romantic writer (and a derivative one at that) or a prophetic modernist and/or even post-modernist. And was he more ‘American’ than many canonically influential Americanist critics have alleged and thus less in line with his ‘international’ supporters as formerly supposed? De Prospo’s work galvanizes these and other otherwise familiar Poesque topics.” —Louis A. Renza, Emeritus Professor of English, Dartmouth College
      “Once upon a time, Poe was ‘Halloween’—a freak with fancies. Redeemed from this, he became first a major romantic and then, with the aid of the French, an epitome of the post-modern, hiding out somewhere in the canon of classic American literature. Time to think again. In R. C. De Prospo’s revisionist account, Poe’s deepest roots are in a number of ancient and venerable traditions, both pagan and Christian, his themes more neo-medieval than post-modern. Brave to challenge the prophets of deconstruction and authorial nonentity, De Prospo’s wide learning and theoretical sophistication are well up to the task.” —Michael Colacurcio, Distinguished Professor of English, University of California, Los Angeles

      Table of Contents

      Foreword: Poe’s Difference – Acknowledgements – "An Anomaly on the Face of the Earth": Poe’s Reviews – Poe’s Pym/Stevenson’s Jim – Pym, Prometheus, and the Marinere – Afterword: Poe’s Parelcon – Index.

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