Necessary Madness: The Humor of Domesticity in Nineteenth-Century American Literature / Edition 1

Necessary Madness: The Humor of Domesticity in Nineteenth-Century American Literature / Edition 1

by Gregg Camfield
ISBN-10:
0195100409
ISBN-13:
9780195100402
Pub. Date:
09/25/1997
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195100409
ISBN-13:
9780195100402
Pub. Date:
09/25/1997
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Necessary Madness: The Humor of Domesticity in Nineteenth-Century American Literature / Edition 1

Necessary Madness: The Humor of Domesticity in Nineteenth-Century American Literature / Edition 1

by Gregg Camfield
$175.0
Current price is , Original price is $175.0. You
$175.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Overview

In this rich, exciting new book, Gregg Camfield explores nineteenth-century American humor from the perspective of gender and domestic ideology, challenging recent theory asserting a broad gulf between men's and women's humor during the period and contributing vital new insights to the study of humor in general.
Capturing in part I a vision of humor unique to the era, Camfield examines the period's faith in what was called "amiable humor," a genial and supple comic mode whose non- aggression makes it resist easy assimilation to theories stressing humor's basis in hostility, negation, rage, and other combative or displaced energies. Seeking to illuminate this distinct comedy, Camfield probes a related, central cultural strand—the domesticity ideal—that so often is a subject of this humor, carefully tracking contact between the two discourses and identifying their common social and intellectual roots. Turning next to four literary case-studies powerfully revealing of this contact, Camfield in part II pairs male and female humorists—Washington Irving and Fanny Fern; Harriet Beecher Stowe and Herman Melville; Mark Twain and Marietta Holley; and George Washington Harris and Mary Wilkins Freeman—not only to demonstrate the way these influential writers approach domesticity with genial humor, but also to support his claim that gender difference does not always correlate to differences in viewpoint and practice within this common style. Where many argue nineteenth- century women's humor constitutes a genre unto itself, Camfield finds that like women, men filtered reaction to the constraints and opportunities of home life through genial comedy, and that women, like their male counterparts, wrote humor marked by extravagance, expansion, caricature, fantasy, and posturing. Broadening out to an intriguing consideration of humor theory in part III, Camfield draws on recent work in psychology, culture studies, neo-pragmatist philosophy, and neuroscience to model a compelling alternative view of humor capable of negotiating both the complexities of nineteenth-century American humor and the comic art of periods before and since. Students and scholars of humor, nineteenth-century American literature and culture, and women's writing, will find Necessary Madness to be a provocative, essential achievement.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195100402
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/25/1997
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)
Lexile: 1460L (what's this?)

About the Author

University of the Pacific
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews