

An edition of Authority and reform (2003)
religious and educational discourses in nineteenth-century New England literature
By Mark G. Vásquez
Publish Date
2003
Publisher
University of Tennessee Press
Language
eng
Pages
393
Description:
"This book explores the ways in which the interplay of religion and education fostered the concepts of self-culture and social reform and shows how such interplay helped construct varying epistemologies, individualities, and discourse communities. Mark Vasquez traces the evolution of self-culture from a theological concept to an educational and literary one. Drawing on examples ranging from late-eighteenth-century epistolary novels and religious pamphlets to temperance texts, essays, and late-nineteenth-century sentimental novels, he shows how writers applied prevailing languages of power to promote the sweeping changes that churches and schools seemed incapable of carrying out by themselves. As a reformative force, the literary text encouraged activism among all its readers, but affected (and was affected by) women more profoundly than, and differently from, men.". "Vasquez examines the Unitarian-Transcendental tradition as represented in the works of William Ellery Channing, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Amos Bronson Alcott, and Margaret Fuller, and the Calvinist-Evangelical line of the Beechers. Despite philosophical and stylistic differences between the two schools, Vasquez shows that there was mutual influence in the evolving New England discourse of self-culture. By reconsidering changes in religious, educational, and literary cultures in terms of the construction of individual and community identity, he demonstrates that authority and reform arose as the most pervasive social concerns of that era. A final chapter considers Harriet Beecher Stowe and Louisa May Alcott as inheritors of these respective legacies, urging their female readers to temper self-culture with self-sacrifice and to move beyond the domestic sphere toward an epicene community."--BOOK JACKET.
subjects: American Authors, American Didactic literature, American literature, Education in literature, Educational change, English language, History, History and criticism, Homes and haunts, In literature, Intellectual life, Religion and literature, Religion in literature, Rhetoric, American literature, history and criticism, 19th century, Didactic literature, history and criticism, English language, rhetoric, New england, intellectual life, New england, in literature
Places: New England
Times: 19th century