Fleshing Out America: Race, Gender, and the Politics of the Body in American Literature, 1833-1879

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University of Georgia Press, Dec 1, 2002 - Literary Criticism - 300 pages
Can we work through the imaginative space of literature to combat the divisive nature of the politics of the body? That is the central question asked of the writings Carolyn Sorisio investigates in Fleshing Out America. The first half of the nineteenth century ushered in an era of powerful scientific and quasi-scientific disciplines that assumed innate differences between the "types" of humankind. Some proponents of slavery and Indian Removal, as well as opponents of women's rights, supplanted the Declaration of Independence's higher law of inborn equality with a new set of "laws" proclaiming the physical inferiority of women, "Negroes," and "Aboriginals."

Fleshing Out America explores the representation of the body in the work of seven authors, all of whom were involved with their era's reform movements: Lydia Maria Child, Frances E. W. Harper, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Walt Whitman, Harriet Jacobs, and Martin R. Delany. For such American writers, who connected the individual body symbolically with the body politic, the new science was fraught with possibility and peril. Covering topics from representation, spectatorship, and essentialism to difference, power, and authority, Carolyn Sorisio places these writers' works in historical context and in relation to contemporary theories of corporeality. She shows how these authors struggled, in diverse and divergent ways, to flesh out America--to define, even defend, the nation's body in a tumultuous period.

Drawing on Euro- and African American authors of both genders who are notable for their aesthetic and political differences, Fleshing Out America demonstrates the surprisingly diverse literary conversation taking place as American authors attempted to reshape the politics of the body, which shaped the politics of the time.

 

Contents

Remapping the NineteenthCentury Literary Landscape
1
Race Gender and Sexuality in NineteenthCentury America
14
Corporeality in Lydia Maria Childs Antislavery Writing
47
Harpers Antebellum Poetry and Reconstruction Fiction
79
Corporeal Challenges to Ralph Waldo Emersons Republic of the Spirit
104
The Price of Margaret Fullers Progressive Feminist Project
143
Whitmans Radical Promise and the Perils of Seduction
173
Corporeality and Transcendence in Jacobss Incidents
202
Martin R Delany and the Politics of Ethnology
226
Notes
241
Works Cited
273
Index
287
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About the author (2002)

Carolyn Sorisio is an assistant professor of English at West Chester University of Pennsylvania.

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