The American Epic

The American Epic Transforming a Genre 1770-1860 - Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture

Hardback (04 May 1990)

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Publisher's Synopsis

John McWilliams's 1990 book was the first thorough account of the many attempts to fashion an epic literature (the anxiously anticipated 'American Epic') from a wide range of potentially heroic New World subjects. At the outset, McWilliams considers the many problems - cultural, political and literary' - of adapting Enlightenment views of republican progress to a genre that had traditionally celebrated the greatness of warriors. After a survey of the many epic poems written during and after the American Revolution, McWilliams shows how and why the epic had to be transformed from imitative narrative poetry into the new, open genres of prose history (Irving, Prescott and Parkman), fictional romance (Cooper and Melville) and free verse (Whitman). Believing that reviews are an important and slighted agent of literary change, McWilliams has written his book in the form of chronological literary history. His book, however, is no march of dates within tired categories. The American Epic suggests that imaginative writers of the Romantic era were in fact far less proscriptive about the boundaries of literary genre than many a twentieth-century writer and scholar.

Book information

ISBN: 9780521373227
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Imprint: Cambridge University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 811.03209
DEWEY edition: 20
Language: English
Number of pages: 284
Weight: 562g
Height: 236mm
Width: 159mm
Spine width: 25mm