Nineteenth‐century Literature Criticism. Volume 212. Topics: The American Civil War, Fairy Tales, and Physiognomy201029Project Editor Kathy D. Darrow. Nineteenth‐century Literature Criticism. Volume 212. Topics: The American Civil War, Fairy Tales, and Physiognomy. Detroit, MI: Gale 2009. xiii+495 pp., ISBN: 978 1 4144 3410 0, ISSN: 0732 1864$278 Nineteenth‐Century Literature Criticism

2010 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-42
Author(s):  
Bob Duckett
2018 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 613-635
Author(s):  
SARAH SILLIN

Portraits of sympathizers recur across American literature, from nineteenth-century narratives by Edward Everett Hale Jr., Loreta Velazquez, and Walt Whitman to Viet Thanh Nguyen's twenty-first-century novel. Together, their texts elucidate why this understudied trope remains provocative. Whereas nineteenth-century literature often imagines how sympathy fosters national cohesion, feeling for the enemy threatens such stability and prompts government efforts to regulate sentiment. Sympathizers may perform loyalty to claim the authority associated with white masculinity. Yet they also gain power by confessing to criminal sentiments. This figure thus embodies fantasies of rebellion, fears of national dissolution, and the state's affective power.


2017 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 137-144
Author(s):  
Beata Telatyńska

Prior to the nineteenth century, literature aimed particularly at children did not exist. Only romanticism saw the great potential that the engagement with the topic of childhood offered. In Poland Stanislaw Jachowicz – Polish storyteller, educator and charity activist-achieved s significant successes in this field. In this article, the author presents Jachowicz’s work from two perspectives. By conducting a nineteenth century and a contemporary reading of his narrations, she examines the possible contexts of reading Jachowicz’s didactic literature, concentrating primarily on his fairy tales. Although, from the point of view of contemporary pedagogy, Jachowicz’s educational methods are outdated and inadequate to give guidance on the realities that the children of today face, one can find universal elements in the writer’s work, for example, respect for another person, work, money or empathy. The modern reader is invited to gain a better understanding of the realities of the nineteenth century family and confront these insights with the challenges and the hopes of the present day.


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