Washington Irving Washington Irving

Washington Irving

An American Study, 1802-1832

    • $59.99
    • $59.99

Publisher Description

Originally published in 1965. Despite his prolificacy, Washington Irving remained an underexamined figure among literary scholars at the time William L. Hedges published his definitive study of the author in 1965. Most contemporary scholars believed that Irving's central contribution to the American literary tradition was that his work was "polished" and "suave." These scholars maintained that Irving's aristocratic sensibilities defined the stylistic choices of his literary works. To assume this, Hedges contends, is to "both let the man and the work slip beyond one's grasp." Hedges demonstrates that much of Irving's work can be understood in the context of his conflict between federalist and conservative politics. Irving, in other words, found himself incapable of committing to a coherent set of beliefs or attitudes, and this cultural uneasiness manifested itself in his early work. Washington Irving: An American Study, 1802-1832 tries to correct some of the misapprehension about Irving's place in nineteenth-century American literature.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2019
December 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
290
Pages
PUBLISHER
Johns Hopkins University Press
SELLER
Johns Hopkins University
SIZE
2.4
MB
Catastrophe and Imagination Catastrophe and Imagination
2017
A Preface to Conrad A Preface to Conrad
2014
Individual and Community Individual and Community
2012
The Selected Writings of Andrew Lang The Selected Writings of Andrew Lang
2016
A Study of Hawthorne A Study of Hawthorne
2014
American and European Literary Imagination American and European Literary Imagination
2017