Surveyors of Customs: American Literature as Cultural Analysis

Surveyors of Customs: American Literature as Cultural Analysis

by Joel Pfister
Surveyors of Customs: American Literature as Cultural Analysis

Surveyors of Customs: American Literature as Cultural Analysis

by Joel Pfister

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Overview

In 1850, Nathaniel Hawthorne, fired from Salem's Custom House and returning to writing, reconceived his old job title, Surveyor of Customs, as his new one. Taking seriously this naming of the American author's project, Joel Pfister argues that writers from Benjamin Franklin to Louise Erdrich can be read as critical "surveyors" of customs, culture, hegemony, capitalism's emotional logic, and much else.

Literary surveyors have helped make possible and can advance what we now call cultural analysis. In recent decades cultural theory and history have changed how we read literature. Literature can return the favor. America's achievement as a literary nation has contributed creatively to its accomplishment as a self-critical nation. The surveyors convened herein wrote novels, stories, plays, poetry, essays, autobiography, journals, and cultural criticism. Surveyors of Customs explores literature's insights into how America—its soft capitalism, its "democratized" inequality, its Americanization of power—"ticks."

Historical—and timely—questions abound. When and why did capitalism invest in the secular "soul-making" business and what roles did literature play in this? What does literature teach us about its relationship to the establishment of a personnel culture that moved beyond self-help incentive-making and intensified Americans' preoccupations with personal life to turn them into personnel? How did literature contribute to the reproduction of "classless" class relations and what does this say about dress-down politics and class formation in our Second Gilded Age?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190876555
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 04/01/2018
Series: Oxford Studies in American Literary History
Pages: 290
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Joel Pfister is Olin Professor of English, Chair of the American Studies department, and was recently Chair of the English department at Wesleyan University. He has written five books and co-edited a volume of essays that range over U.S. literature and drama, the cultural history of subjectivity, the Anglo-American history of cultural critique, and the history of Americanization, race, and class.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: The Critical Work and Critical Pleasure of American Literature

1. Inner-Self Industries: Soft Capitalism's Reproductive Logic

2. How America Works: Getting Personal to Get Personnel

3. Dress-Down Conquest: Americanizing Top-Down as Bottom-Up

Afterword: Payoffs

Notes

Works Consulted

Index
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