Dancing in Chains

The Youth of William Dean Howells

Biography & Memoir, Historical
Cover of the book Dancing in Chains by Rodney D. Olsen, NYU Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Rodney D. Olsen ISBN: 9780814762301
Publisher: NYU Press Publication: April 1, 1991
Imprint: NYU Press Language: English
Author: Rodney D. Olsen
ISBN: 9780814762301
Publisher: NYU Press
Publication: April 1, 1991
Imprint: NYU Press
Language: English

"Dancing in Chains is far more than a sensitive biography (though it is surely that); it is also a model of psychologically informed social and cultural history. Olsen recognizes that psychic conflicts often play themselves out on a higher plane, that psychic and intellectual history are intertwined. He presents a wonderful nuanced picture of Howells."
-Jackson Lears,Rutgers University
In this insightful study of the childhood and youth of William Dean Howells, Dancing in Chains demonstrates how the turbulent social and cultural changes of the early nineteenth century shaped the young Howells's emotional and intellectual life. His early diaries, letters, poetry, fiction, and newspaper columns are used to illustrate Olsen's argument, which also in turn throws light on the dominant tensions in antebellum America.
Accepting the emergent middle-class ethos of civilized morality, with its new conceptions of child rearing and gender spheres, Howells's parents urged him to achieve self-control and individual success while also teaching him to seek the good of others rather than his own glory. For Howells the conflicts coalesced at the time of his leaving home, an increasing common rite of passage for antebellum youth. Trying to affirm his sense of literary vocation, he tested his aspirations against the family's Swedenborgian religious convictions and the antislavery commitments of his village while experimenting with competing literary ideologies in the process of meeting the demands of the new mass reading audience. For Howells the resulting tensions eased toward the end of his youth but reappeared in his more mature works of fiction and social criticism in later years.
Portraying the ordeal of coming of age during a momentous period of American history, Dancing in Chains is a fascinating study with a broad appeal to general readers as well as scholars.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

"Dancing in Chains is far more than a sensitive biography (though it is surely that); it is also a model of psychologically informed social and cultural history. Olsen recognizes that psychic conflicts often play themselves out on a higher plane, that psychic and intellectual history are intertwined. He presents a wonderful nuanced picture of Howells."
-Jackson Lears,Rutgers University
In this insightful study of the childhood and youth of William Dean Howells, Dancing in Chains demonstrates how the turbulent social and cultural changes of the early nineteenth century shaped the young Howells's emotional and intellectual life. His early diaries, letters, poetry, fiction, and newspaper columns are used to illustrate Olsen's argument, which also in turn throws light on the dominant tensions in antebellum America.
Accepting the emergent middle-class ethos of civilized morality, with its new conceptions of child rearing and gender spheres, Howells's parents urged him to achieve self-control and individual success while also teaching him to seek the good of others rather than his own glory. For Howells the conflicts coalesced at the time of his leaving home, an increasing common rite of passage for antebellum youth. Trying to affirm his sense of literary vocation, he tested his aspirations against the family's Swedenborgian religious convictions and the antislavery commitments of his village while experimenting with competing literary ideologies in the process of meeting the demands of the new mass reading audience. For Howells the resulting tensions eased toward the end of his youth but reappeared in his more mature works of fiction and social criticism in later years.
Portraying the ordeal of coming of age during a momentous period of American history, Dancing in Chains is a fascinating study with a broad appeal to general readers as well as scholars.

More books from NYU Press

Cover of the book Parenting Out of Control by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book The Trans Generation by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Homeroom Security by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book The Healing Power of the Santuario de Chimayó by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Must We Defend Nazis? by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book The Widows' Might by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Democracy in Modern Iran by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Critical Trauma Studies by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Language and the Distortion of Meaning by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Freedom’s Prophet by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book In the Spirit of a New People by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Dreaming Blackness by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book Nothing but the Truth by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book America, As Seen on TV by Rodney D. Olsen
Cover of the book As Long as We Both Shall Love by Rodney D. Olsen
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy