Hopp til hovedinnhold
Omslagsbilde

Energy and Economy in American Literature

Ackerman, Alan

Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture

|

Innbundet

Forventes utgitt

Forventes utgitt: 30.09.2026

Leveringstid: 7-30 dager

Handlinger

Beskrivelse

Omtale

This ambitious history of industrial and cultural revolution illuminates the formation of a new idiom of energy and economy in nineteenth-century America. In 1851, Ralph Waldo Emerson made an arduous journey to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. There, in a series of lectures, he articulated modern ideas of industrial power, the soul's economy, and a value system premised on a new set of prime movers, fossil fuels. Emerson asked a practical question: 'How shall I live?' His response was to create a mythic language centered on the energy-and-economy dialectic. This book vividly shows how other authors, from Catharine Beecher, who laid the groundwork for the environmental canon, and W. E. B. Du Bois, who poeticized labor, to Henry Adams and Edith Wharton, as well as conservationists, homemakers, and coal miners, built on Emerson's 'practical question' to give fresh purpose to human existence in a radically altered world.

Detaljer