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Love's Whipping Boy
Love's Whipping Boy
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Love's Whipping Boy

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Working to reconcile the Christian dictum to love ones neighbor as oneself with evidence of U.S. sociopolitical aggression, including slavery, corporal punishment of children, and Indian removal, Elizabeth Barnes focuses her attention on aggressors rather than the weak or abused to suggest ways of understanding paradoxical relationships between empathy, violence, and religion that took hold so strongly in nineteenth-century American culture.Looking at works by Herman Melville, Frederick Douglass, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Louisa May Alcott, among others, Barnes shows how violence and sensibility work together to produce a more sensitive citizenry. Aggression becomes a site of redemptive possibility because salvation is gained when the powerful protagonist identifies with the person he harms. Barnes argues that this identification and emotional transformation come at a high price, however, as the reparative ends are bought with anothers blood.Critics of nineteenth-century literature have tended to think about sentimentality and violence as opposing strategies in the work of nation-building and in the formation of U.S. national identity. Yet to understand how violence gets folded into sentimentalitys egalitarian goals is to recognize, importantly, the deep entrenchment of aggression in the empathetic structures of liberal, Christian culture in the United States.
Alaotsikko
Violence and Sentimentality in the American Imagination
ISBN
9780807877968
Kieli
englanti
Julkaisupäivä
14.3.2011
Formaatti
  • Epub - Adobe DRM
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