Democratic Humanism and American Literature illustrates the interplay between democratic assumptions and literary performance in the America's classic nineteenth-century writers--Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, Cooper, Poe, Whitman, Twain, and James. Harold Kaplan suggests that these major figures' works are linked by the myths of genesis of a new political culture. Challenged by the democratic ideal, and committed to it, they wrote prophetic books in the American liberal tradition and endowed its ethical intelligence.
The task of stating a new and undefined freedom was always implicit and often in the foreground of the writing of these nineteenth-century giants. As the author describes the situation, "the free man had to decide in what sense he was bound by nature or could master it; in what sense he was committed to his society and could reconcile his freedom with it." These classic writers devoted their work to examining this dialectic of values; Kaplan sees their complex and polarized democratic consciousness as seminal in the imaginative tradition they generated. What is unique in that tradition of values is the rivalry of criticism with affirmations of faith. "The highly original ethical trait involved here is based on the capacity of a political society to use its negations against itself and survive."
The author suggests that in our own time moral judgments are more likely to be the province of activist politics than literature. His new introduction relates the theme of the book to cultural and political developments in the American experience of modernity and adds a discussion of Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams to the figures treated in the original edition. Since tendencies to develop ideological and idiosyncratic responses to extrinsic events have grown stronger over time, it is more important than ever for scholars and students alike to recover a "moral imagination"--the force that gave rise to the great literary works of the nineteenth century. To describe that force is Harold Kaplan's goal in Democratic Humanism and American Literature.
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Harold Kaplan was professor emeritus, English and American Literature, at Northwestern University and formerly taught at Rutgers University and Bennington College. He was the author of The Passive Voice: An Approach to Modern Fiction and Democratic Humanism and American Literature, published by Transaction.
"[Democratic Humanism and American Literature] stands in a class by itself. . . . [It] achieves originality through sheer brilliance and subtlety."
—Modern Fiction Studies, Volume 18, Number 4, Winter
"You read with enormous sympathies and write with grace. . . . [Your] perceptions have a way of stimulating dozens of new links and shewings in my own mind as I read you. This is a splendid book for which I am grateful to you—it asserts possibilities and justifies the profession."
—William H. Shurr, letter to Kaplan
"Rich in its particular analyses, Democratic Humanism and American Literature is a persuasive, acutely intelligent criticism which assembles the classic documents of nineteenth-century American literature in a new, instructive context."
—James W. Tuttleton, The Journal of American History
"Kaplan's book gives every evidence of scholarly greatness. . . . A deft analysis . . . admirably serves to illuminate the classic literary texts. . . . Highly recommended."
—John R. Willingham, Library Journal
"A particularly insightful and rewarding study of an important facet of the American imagination. . . . [This] work must be considered a crucial document for all inquiries into American literary thought."
—Choice
"Kaplan has given us further reason for cherishing our literary heritage."
—Granville Hicks, The New Leader
"Kaplan's interest in the creative aspects of literature . . . . lifts the book well above the level of the popular survey."
—The English Association, Volume 53
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