Thoreau's Axe
Distraction and Discipline in American Culture
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- 18,99 €
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- 18,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
How nineteenth-century “disciplines of attention” anticipated the contemporary concern with mindfulness and being “spiritual but not religious”
Today, we’re driven to distraction, our attention overwhelmed by the many demands upon it—most of which emanate from our beeping and blinking digital devices. This may seem like a decidedly twenty-first-century problem, but, as Caleb Smith shows in this elegantly written, meditative work, distraction was also a serious concern in American culture two centuries ago. In Thoreau’s Axe, Smith explores the strange, beautiful archives of the nineteenth-century attention revival—from a Protestant minister’s warning against frivolous thoughts to Thoreau’s reflections on wakefulness at Walden Pond. Smith examines how Americans came to embrace attention, mindfulness, and other ways of being “spiritual but not religious,” and how older Christian ideas about temptation and spiritual devotion endure in our modern ideas about distraction and attention.
Smith explains that nineteenth-century worries over attention developed in response to what were seen as the damaging mental effects of new technologies and economic systems. A “wandering mind,” once diagnosed, was in need of therapy or rehabilitation. Modeling his text after nineteenth-century books of devotion, Smith offers close readings of twenty-eight short passages about attention. Considering social reformers who designed moral training for the masses, religious leaders who organized Christian revivals, and spiritual seekers like Thoreau who experimented with regimens of simplified living and transcendental mysticism, Smith shows how disciplines of attention became the spiritual exercises of a distracted age.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Yale English professor Smith (The Prison and the American Imagination) offers a solid treatise on attention and distraction in American culture. Focusing on late 18th- and 19th-century American discourse, Smith wonders "what kind of problem is distraction, and how did we come to care so much about attention?" Adapting "an old religious genre, the book of devotion," which combines "brief excerpts" and "the author's own meditations," Smith provides a wide range of close-readings and easily digestible musings on Herman Melville's depiction in Moby-Dick of the dissociation that comes with labor; Edgar Allan Poe's description of a narrator with "an attention surplus" in the story "Berenice"; Emily Dickinson's practice of the "discipline of attention" in her poetry; and more. With a colloquial tone, Smith makes a solid case that the contemporary take on distraction, in which "we adjust our consumption habits, or we make efforts to ensure that our leisure time is quality time, spent mindfully," is an old one that came about in the 19th century. Smith poignantly queries the enduring notion that distraction can be fought with "personal, moral remedies": "The real question is whether disciplines of attention can be linked up with programs for economic and social—not just personal—transformation." The result is a rousing academic study on the meanings of mindfulness.