Beyond Understanding: Appeals to the Imagination, Passions, and Will in Mid-nineteenth-century American Women's FictionPeter Lang, 1996 - 205 pages To appreciate how and why America's first best-sellers so gripped the American soul, current readers need to recapture the era's cognitive paradigm. In Beyond Understanding, Dr. Henning introduces us to the nineteenth-century mind, influenced, in large part, by eighteenth-century Scottish philosopher, theologian, and rhetorician, George Campbell. Reading «feminine fifties» works in light of Campbell's faculty psychology helps reveal why this fiction so inspired its original readers; further, acknowledging and reevaluating marginalized reading methods supports an expanding literary canon. Finally, revisiting Campbell's «philosophy of rhetoric» encourages current lovers of discourse to experience literature and life holistically - beyond understanding. |
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Page 45
... calls it ) appeals powerfully to both anima and animus , and provides views of both the wise old man and the earth mother , it spans gender expectations and needs . Thus , he argues that the domestic novel should withstand cultural and ...
... calls it ) appeals powerfully to both anima and animus , and provides views of both the wise old man and the earth mother , it spans gender expectations and needs . Thus , he argues that the domestic novel should withstand cultural and ...
Page 94
... calls " vivacity " : " Nothing contributes more to vivacity than striking re- semblances in the imagery , which ... call to present “ qualities in ideas which principally gratify the fancy [ succeeding in ] awakening and preserving the ...
... calls " vivacity " : " Nothing contributes more to vivacity than striking re- semblances in the imagery , which ... call to present “ qualities in ideas which principally gratify the fancy [ succeeding in ] awakening and preserving the ...
Page 173
... calls her writing " no less sentimental " than Fanny Fern's ( 96 ) . Lucy Freibert and Barbara White correct such statements : " Southworth was clearly not the ' domestic sentimentalist ' she is classi- fied as in many literary ...
... calls her writing " no less sentimental " than Fanny Fern's ( 96 ) . Lucy Freibert and Barbara White correct such statements : " Southworth was clearly not the ' domestic sentimentalist ' she is classi- fied as in many literary ...
Contents
ILLUSTRATIONS xi | 11 |
INTRODUCTION 1 | 11 |
AMERICAN WOMEN WRITERS OF THE 1850s | 27 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
19th-Century according to Campbell American women's association association psychology Baym book's Campbell's philosophy canon Cap's Capitola Catharine Montour century challenges characters Christian contemporary critics cultural current readers describes Eliza Ellen emulate ends of discourse explains faculties fiction floral flowers Freibert Gabler-Hover Godey's Godey's Lady's Book Habegger Hale Harris Henry Ward Beecher hermeneutic Herzog Hidden Hand human ideas images influence language literary live Mary Derwent mid-nineteenth-century mother move the passions moves the reader's nature nineteenth nineteenth-century American nineteenth-century reader novel Papashvily Philosophy of Rhetoric plot popular reader's imagination reader's mind reader's passions reader's understanding rhetorical appeals rhetoricians Sarah Josepha Hale scenes scholars Sensational sense slave slavery social Southern Literary Messenger Southworth Stephens Stephens's story Stowe Stowe's Susan Susan Warner sympathy Tahmeroo theological tion Tompkins Traverse twentieth-century reader Uncle Tom's Cabin vanquish error Warner Wide World women authors women writers writes Wyoming Valley Wyoming Valley Massacre