Fr. 135.00

War Power - Literature and the State in the Civil War North

English · Hardback

Will be released 20.08.2024

Description

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Summary

What happens if we reconsider the literature of the Civil War North in light of the transformation of the federal state's power? While literary scholarship about the Civil War has more generally focused on the rise of wartime nationalism, Philip Gould looks particularly at how literary works engage the subjects of censorship, propaganda, and the reconfigured meanings of "loyalty" and "treason" at a time of political crisis.

During the war the Lincoln Administration shut down opposition newspapers and curtailed free expression and civil liberties protected by the US Constitution. Lincoln also suspended the writ of habeas corpus to deal with political dissenters and try to control public opinion. Early in the war, he coined the phrase "war power" to describe the (presumed) powers to address this crisis; his policies became controversial throughout the conflict. War Power: Literature and the State in the Civil War North considers literary production in this "total war" that radically changed the federal government's (and its military's) relation to traditional norms and spaces of private, domestic, and social life.

Each chapter focuses on a major writer in the Civil War North's engagement with questions of identity, affect, and affiliation: Could one love the Union as one loved home and family? What were the implications for literary expression in the midst of a political culture being reshaped by censorship and propaganda? The final two chapters address the role and plight of African Americans in the Civil War and its aftermath, focusing particularly on African American military service as the supposed means by which racially disenfranchised Americans might become citizens.

Product details

Authors Philip Gould, Philip (Israel J. Kapstein Professor of Eng Gould
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Release 20.08.2024
 
EAN 9780198897354
ISBN 978-0-19-889735-4
No. of pages 272
Series Oxford Studies in American Literary History
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > English linguistics / literary studies

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