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Published By Fordham University Press

9780823282623, 9780823286225

2019 ◽  
pp. 75-111
Author(s):  
Dana Seitler
Keyword(s):  

This chapter is about how art objects in Henry James’s fiction function as a theory of desire.


2019 ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Dana Seitler

This book explores the pivotal role that various art forms played in American literary fiction in direct relation to the politics of gender and sexuality at the turn of the century. I track the transverse circulation of aesthetic ideas in fiction expressly concerned with gender and sexuality, and I argue that at stake in fin-de-siècle American writers’ aesthetic turn was not only the theorization of aesthetic experience, but also a fashioning forth of an understanding of aesthetic form in relation to political arguments and debates about available modes of sociability and cultural expression. One of the impulses of this study is to produce what we might think of as a counter-history of the aesthetic in the U.S. context at three (at least) significant and overlapping historical moments. The first is the so-called “first wave” of feminism, usually historicized as organized around the vote and the struggle for economic equality. The second is marked by the emergence of the ontologically interdependent homosexual/heterosexual matrix—expressed in Foucault’s famous revelation that, while the sodomite had been a temporary aberration, at the fin de siècle “the homosexual was now a species,” along with Eve Sedgwick’s claim that the period marks an “endemic crisis in homo-heterosexual definition.”...


2019 ◽  
pp. 112-158
Author(s):  
Dana Seitler
Keyword(s):  

This chapter explores the politics of allusion in Willa Cather and W. E. B. Du Bois’s fiction, specifically their use of Wagner’s opera Lohengrin.


2019 ◽  
pp. 43-74
Author(s):  
Dana Seitler

This chapter analyzes the short stories of Sarah Orne Jewett and Mary Wilkins Freeman and their emphasis on home craft (including sewing, quilting, and frame making) in their relation to an aesthetics of small collectivity.


2019 ◽  
pp. 159-162
Author(s):  
Dana Seitler

How should we think about the link between aesthetics and politics in the twenty-first century? Has the conjunction that seemed so forcefully to tie aesthetics, culture, and politics together over the past two centuries dissolved due to neoliberal changes in social life and the processes of advanced global capitalism? The idea that cultural forms and practices are a site at which political realities, hopes, challenges, and anxieties are not merely expressed (whether directly or symptomatically) but constitute a space in which politics are engendered has informed my treatment of art and culture and their social function throughout this study, but not only mine. Starting with the formulation of the connection between the beautiful and freedom in ...


2019 ◽  
pp. 15-42
Author(s):  
Dana Seitler
Keyword(s):  

This chapter traces the role of sculpture in Rebecca Harding Davis’s novella Life in the Iron Mills and its relation to nineteenth-century lesbian art communities.


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