Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Cultures of Letters Scenes of Reading and Writing in the Nineteenth-Century America

Rate this book
Cultures of Letters illuminates the changing place made for literature in American cultural life. Offering critics and general readers alike a fresh view of America's literary past, this book shows that writing is never simply self-generated; rather, it always reflects the literary arrangements and understandings of particular social settings. Richard H. Brodhead uses a great variety of historical sources, many of them considered here for the first time, to reconstruct the institutionalized literary worlds that coexisted in nineteenth-century the middle-class domestic culture of letters, the culture of mass-produced cheap reading, the militantly hierarchical high culture of the post-Civil War decades, and the literary culture of post-emancipation black education. Moving across a range of writers familiar and unfamiliar, and relating groups of writers often considered in artificial isolation, Brodhead describes how these socially structured worlds of writing shaped the terms of literary practice for the authors who inhabited them. Readers will find fresh descriptions of the works and the working conditions of writers like Stowe, Hawthorne, Fanny Fern, Louisa May Alcott, Sarah Orne Jewett, and Charles Chesnutt, among many others. Through its examples, Cultures of Letters also suggests new, historically more informed ways to approach a number of theoretical How do the terms of literature's public consumption affect the terms of its private conception? By what processes are authors admitted to or excluded from literary careers? Are writers all literary in the same way? How do social factors like race or gender affect not only literary works but the place of an author in culture? Written in vigorous, accessible prose and full of unexpected turns of thought, Cultures of Letters makes a major contribution to American literary and cultural studies and to the historical study of literary forms.

Paperback

First published January 1, 1993

28 people want to read

About the author

Richard H. Brodhead

14 books2 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
7 (28%)
4 stars
7 (28%)
3 stars
10 (40%)
2 stars
1 (4%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Sarah.
238 reviews
October 2, 2008
Brodhead's Culture of Letters is composed of a nice selection of essays that explore both the production and consumption of literature in the nineteenth century. Though his book can be divided into two halves: one that explores mechanisms in play for the development of the regionalist genre--including touristic imperialism, leisure culture, and class (using the literature of Jewett and Chestnutt as his main points of entry), the other half is more loosely bound together and composed of an exploration of the cultural effects that "disciplinary intimacy" had on literature and culture (using Alcott's resistence to and complicit involement in the cultural formation of "disciplinary intimacy" as a point of inquiry) and an analysis of Hawthorn's "reconnaissance" into the (mostly female) realm of literary celebrity in Blithedale Romance. All in all, a good read, but a curious composition.
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.