The Province of Piety: Moral History in Hawthorne's Early Tales Contributor(s): Colacurcio, Michael J. (Author) |
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ISBN: 0822315726 ISBN-13: 9780822315728 Publisher: Duke University Press OUR PRICE: $35.10 Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats Published: April 1995 Annotation: "The most comprehensive and far reaching book on Hawthorne. Colacurcio's treatment of the tales and Hawthorne's intellectual biography, so vast and compelling, so rich in detail about the whole sweep of colonial and early republican thought, is an account of most everything that matters in early American literary history. It is one of the monumental books of the postwar era of literary critical thought in American studies."--Eric Sundquist, University of California, Los Angeles "This is a major work--a richly textured discussion of Hawthorne's crucial early development as writer, as moral thinker, and as historian. It is an extraordinary achievement in creative contextual scholarship."--Sacvan Bercovitch "Criticism in the grand style--uncompromising, full of passion, even heroic."--Andrew Delbanco, "Yale Review" |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Literary Criticism | Books & Reading - Literary Criticism | American - General |
Dewey: 813.3 |
LCCN: 94042365 |
Physical Information: 1.38" H x 6.26" W x 9.42" (2.27 lbs) 688 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: In this celebrated analysis of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Michael J. Colacurcio presents a view of the author as America's first significant intellectual historian. Colacurcio shows that Hawthorne's fiction responds to a wide range of sermons, pamphlets, and religious tracts and debates--a variety of moral discourses at large in the world of provincial New England. Informed by comprehensive historical research, the author shows that Hawthorne was steeped in New England historiography, particularly the sermon literature of the seventeenth century. But, as Colacurcio shows, Hawthorne did not merely borrow from the historical texts he deliberately studied; rather, he is best understood as having written history. In The Province of Piety, originally published in 1984 (Harvard University Press), Hawthorne is seen as a moral historian working with fictional narratives--a writer brilliantly involved in examining the moral and political effects of Puritanism in America and recreating the emotional and cultural contexts in which earlier Americans had lived. |