Composing Cultures: Modernism, American Literary Studies, and the Problem of Culture

Composing Cultures: Modernism, American Literary Studies, and the Problem of Culture

Composing Cultures: Modernism, American Literary Studies, and the Problem of Culture

Composing Cultures: Modernism, American Literary Studies, and the Problem of Culture

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Overview

The term "culture" has become ubiquitous in both academic and popular conversations, but its usefulness is a point of dispute. Taking the current shift from cultural studies to aesthetics as the latest form of this discussion, Eric Aronoff contends that in American modernism, the concepts of culture and of aesthetics have always been inseparable. The modernist concept of culture, he argues, arose out of an interdisciplinary dialogue about value, meaning, and form among social critics, artists, anthropologists, and literary critics, including figures as diverse as Van Wyck Brooks, Edward Sapir, Willa Cather, Lewis Mumford, John Crowe Ransom, Raymond Weaver, and Allen Tate. These figures proposed new ways to conceive of culture that intertwined theories of aesthetic and literary value with theories of national, racial, and regional identity. Through close readings, Aronoff shows that disciplines and approaches that are often thought of as opposed—cultural anthropology and aesthetics, American literary history and literary criticism, and multiculturalism and regionalism—are in fact engaged in common debate and proceed from shared arguments about culture and form.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813934839
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 10/18/2013
Series: Cultural Frames, Framing Culture
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Eric Aronoff is Assistant Professor in the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities at Michigan State University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction: The Problem of Culture 1

1 Van Wyck Brooks and Edward Sapir: Divided America and the Form of Genuine Culture 23

2 Possessing Culture: Willa Cather's Aesthetic of Culture in The Song of the Lark and The Professor's House 57

3 Cultures, Canons, and Cetology: Modernist Culture and the Melville Revival 85

4 Recovering the Whole: Culture, Region, and Poetry in the Literary Criticism of John Crowe Ransom and Allen Tate 136

Conclusion: Composing Critical Cultures 181

Notes 195

Index 219

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