Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
"Throughout the nineteenth century, American readers and reviewers assumed that a book revealed its author's individuality, that the experience of reading was a kind of conversation with the writer. Yet as Barbara Hochman shows in this illuminating study, the emergence of literary realism at the turn of the century called such assumptions into question. The realist aesthetic of narrative "objectivity" challenged the notion that a literary text reflects its author's personality.".
"In analyzing the battle over realism and the gradual shift in conventional reading practices, Hochman draws on a rich array of sources, including popular works, advertisements, letters, and reviews. She combines traditional modes of literary inquiry with methods adapted from the new historicism, cultural studies, and book history.
By elucidating the realists' ambivalence about their own aesthetic criteria, she shows how a late nineteenth-century conflict about reading practices reflected pressing tensions in American culture, and how that conflict shaped criteria of literary value for most of the twentieth century."--BOOK JACKET.
Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
Previews available in: English
| Edition | Availability |
|---|---|
|
1
Getting at the Author: Reimagining Books and Reading in the Age of American Realism
2010, University of Massachusetts Press
in English
1558497641 9781558497641
|
zzzz
|
|
2
Getting at the author: reimagining books and reading in the age of American realism
2001, University of Massachusetts Press
in English
1558492879 9781558492875
|
aaaa
|
Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 165-179) and index.

