Vital Signs

Vital Signs Essays on American Literature and Criticism

Hardback (01 Jun 1996)

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Publisher's Synopsis

James Tuttleton's literary writings in such magazines as the New Criterion, the American Scholar, and the Yale Review have earned him a reputation as one of our most trenchant critics. Here he collects twenty essays derived from his long engagement with the masterworks of the American imagination. Discussions of Hawthorne and Emerson, Howells and James, Fuller and Chopin, and Fitzgerald and Anderson, among others, are counterpointed with an analysis of the effect of contemporary critical theory on the American canon. Mr. Tuttleton scrutinizes a century and a half of great American writing from the viewpoint of literature as an art rather than as a datum of "cultural studies" He is severe with those styles of criticism that in his view drain literature of its moral and social significance, or that manipulate literature to serve an ideological agenda. The essays in Vital Signs arise from a conviction that great literature is more than mere discourse or a semiotic freeplay of figurations. In Mr. Tuttleton's view, a great poem or novel is an ontological reality, has a living presence, and is a system of "vital signs" that, from generation to generation, illuminates the world and offers alternatives that might be our own.

Book information

ISBN: 9781566631006
Publisher: Ivan R. Dee
Imprint: Ivan R. Dee
Pub date:
DEWEY: 810.9
DEWEY edition: 20
Language: English
Number of pages: 366
Weight: 662g
Height: 225mm
Width: 162mm
Spine width: 35mm