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  1. Incremental Realism
    postwar American fiction, happiness, and welfare-state liberalism
    Author: Esteve, Mary
    Published: [2021]
    Publisher:  Stanford University Press, Stanford, California

    Landesbibliothekszentrum Rheinland-Pfalz / Pfälzische Landesbibliothek
    121-3357
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    ISBN: 9781503614376; 9781503613942
    Series: Post 45
    Subjects: Wohlfahrtsstaat <Motiv>; Glück <Motiv>; Liberalismus <Motiv>; Literatur
    Other subjects: Literary Criticism; History of the Americas; HISTORY / United States / 20th Century; LITERARY CRITICISM / General; American fiction - History and criticism - 20th century; Authors, American - Political and social views; Happiness in literature; Welfare state in literature; Liberalism in literature; Realism in literature
    Scope: viii, 280 Seiten, 229 mm.
    Notes:

    Contents and AbstractsIntroduction: The Symbolic Economy of Postwar American Happiness chapter abstract"The Symbolic Economy of Postwar American Happiness" enlists Philip Roth's paean to the Newark Public Library, alongside John Kenneth Galbraith's call for new "symbols of happiness," to set the stage for incremental realism's central proposition of keying the trope of happiness to protocols of welfare-state liberalism. It turns to four publishing events-two in 1948, two in 1971-to lay out the numerous obstacles this proposition faced owing to the vexed politics of liberalism and the problematic status of happiness: "A Life Round Table on The Pursuit of Happiness," the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, E. L. Doctorow's The Book of Daniel, and John Rawls's A Theory of Justice.-

    It concludes with preliminary discussions of incremental realism as a critical framework, with brief nods to its paradigmatic practitioners: Philip Roth, Gwendolyn Brooks, Patricia Highsmith, Mary McCarthy, Paula Fox, and Peter Taylor.; 1The Art, Sociology, and Library Politics of Happiness in Early Philip Roth chapter abstract"The Art, Sociology, and Library Politics of Happiness in Early Philip Roth" situates Roth's early fiction within the context of midcentury sociology, psychology, history, and public policy. Drawing on the commentary of public intellectuals such as C. Wright Mills, David Riesman, Lionel Trilling, and Howard Mumford Jones, the chapter documents the pervasive skepticism toward happiness as a national pursuit while also pointing to the minority viewpoint that considered happiness an imaginative ideal bearing the potential to guide Americans toward welfare-state liberalism and socioeconomic justice.-

    Focusing primarily on Goodbye, Columbus (1959), the chapter teases out Roth's commitment to municipal activism, evinced by his portrayal of the main character, a public librarian. The chapter concludes with a discussion of Saul Bellow's misguided short story, "Looking for Mr. Green" (1951), which Roth, in effect, rewrites.; 2Gwendolyn Brooks and the Welfare State chapter abstractIn "Gwendolyn Brooks and the Welfare State," that author's creative writing, autobiographies, and public career make visible the intertwined conditions of midcentury liberal subjectivity, welfare-state activism, and the literary style of incremental realism. The chapter marshals numerous nonliterary sources to make this case, including Robert Dahl and Charles Lindblom's account of procedural incrementalism, Politics, Economics, and Welfare (1953); political philosopher Harry K.-

    Girvetz's crusading promotion of political liberalism, The Evolution of Liberalism (1950); African American philosopher and journalist Marc Moreland's vehement defense of the welfare state in "The Welfare State: Embattled Concept" (1950); and social scientists Abram Kardiner and Lionel Ovesey's study of black character and personality, The Mark of Oppression (1951). But Brooks also recognized the pull of charismatic alternatives to the liberal paradigm.; 3Queer Consumerism, Straight Happiness: Patricia Highsmith's "Right Economy" chapter abstract"Queer Consumerism, Straight Happiness: Patricia Highsmith's 'Right Economy'" centers on Highsmith's novel, The Price of Salt (1952), often celebrated as the first lesbian novel with a happy ending.-

    Alongside the infrastructure of postwar American consumerism that the novel's title obliquely references, Highsmith's and Eleanor Roosevelt's awareness of each other invites consideration of how the normative propositions built into the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights help to make sense of the novel's commitment to the moral idea spelled out in Article 26, namely, of "the full development of the human personality." Such ethical norms turn out to facilitate Highsmith's project of legitimating same-sex desire. But this project also depends on Highsmith's engagement with consumerist desire, a midcentury phenomenon that provoked much public consternation.-

    Creating a kind of self-supporting circularity, Highsmith enlists consumerism to legitimate same-sex desire while also enlisting same-sex desire to legitimate consumerism.; 4Countries of Health chapter abstract"Countries of Health" takes its title from Sylvia Plath's poem, "Tulips," which crystallizes the way midcentury American writing could become entangled not only in what Susan Sontag described as a mystification of illness through "lurid metaphor" but also in the politics of actually existing health care. The chapter examines a series of novels-Trilling's The Middle of the Journey (1947), Mary McCarthy's The Group (1963), James Gunn's The Joy Makers (1961), and Paula Fox's Poor George (1967) and Desperate Characters (1970)-whose force depends on their representations of health-care systems and the value structures through which illness and health are refracted. These works help explain why welfare provisions have always been such a hard sell in the United States.-

    They register the difficulty of displacing Sontag's lurid metaphor with Galbraith's symbols of happiness.; 5Writing Mute Liberalism: Peter Taylor, the South, and Journeyman Happiness chapter abstract"Writing Mute Liberalism: Peter Taylor, the South, and Journeyman Happiness" argues that Taylor is best understood as a literary ethnographer of southern liberalism. It explores how, in stories such as "In the Miro District" (1977) and "The Elect" (1968), Taylor deploys an incrementalist style of inductive analogy and digressive anecdote to represent the suppressive conditions under which moderate liberalism circulated in the South. It examines Taylor's attentiveness to what he called "the disadvantages or injustices or cruelties" in the South.-

    With his tone of moderate civility, akin to Lionel Trilling's description of William Dean Howells, stories such as "1939" (1955), "Je Suis Perdu" (1958), and "Dean of Men" (1968) focus on men affiliated with universities and speak to the benefits of institutional liberalism-as opposed to the South's favored institution, the family, whose crippling effects are dramatized in The Death of a Kinsman (1949).; Coda: The Politics of Contemporary Happiness chapter abstract"The Politics of Contemporary Happiness" offers a highly compressed summary analysis of how the contemporary confluence of happiness science and postmodern happiness critique has resulted in the nearly total eclipse of the happiness trope's potential function as a welfare-state proposition.-

    With Richard Powers's 2009 novel Generosity as a literary touchstone, the coda argues that postmodern and poststructuralist criticism effectively collaborates with happiness science to segregate happiness from normative politics, specifically from considerations of human flourishing and welfare-state justice. It traces the parallel ascendance of happiness science's disavowal of everything political-owing largely to its behavioral and geneticist methodologies-and of postmodernism's displacement of welfare-state liberalism by a politics of recognition and/or radical deterritorialization coded as joy. Both modes of disowning normative politics serve only to strengthen what Powers suggests is technofuturism's co-optation of happiness.

  2. White liberal identity, literary pedagogy, and classic American realism
    Published: [2005]; © 2005
    Publisher:  Ohio State University Press, Columbus

    Universitätsbibliothek Paderborn
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  3. Lyric and liberalism in the age of American empire
    Author: Foley, Hugh
    Published: 2022
    Publisher:  Oxford University Press, Oxford

    Lyric and Liberalism in the Age of American Empire re-examines the work of Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Lowell, Amiri Baraka, John Ashbery, and Jorie Graham, changing our understanding of their writing and the field of post-war American poetry. more

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    Lyric and Liberalism in the Age of American Empire re-examines the work of Elizabeth Bishop, Robert Lowell, Amiri Baraka, John Ashbery, and Jorie Graham, changing our understanding of their writing and the field of post-war American poetry.

     

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    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780191947872
    Other identifier:
    Edition: First edition
    Series: Oxford English monographs
    Subjects: American poetry; American poetry; Liberalism in literature
    Other subjects: Bishop, Elizabeth (1911-1979); Lowell, Robert (1917-1977); Baraka, Amiri (1934-2014); Ashbery, John (1927-2017); Graham, Jorie (1950-)
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (245 Seiten)
    Notes:

    Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources

  4. Death rights
    romantic suicide, race, and the bounds of liberalism
    Published: [2021]
    Publisher:  SUNY Press, Albany

    "Analyzes how literary representations of suicide have reinforced antiblackness in the modern world"-- more

    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Bonn
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    "Analyzes how literary representations of suicide have reinforced antiblackness in the modern world"--

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781438482897
    Subjects: Suicide in literature; Literature and race; Romanticism; Liberalism in literature; Suicide and literature
    Scope: ix, 203 Seiten
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

  5. Gotthelf im Zeitgeflecht
    Bauernleben, industrielle Revolution und Liberalismus in seinen Romanen
    Published: 1985
    Publisher:  De Gruyter, Berlin

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    Universitätsbibliothek Passau
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: German
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783110941463; 9783111878942
    RVK Categories: GL 4618
    Series: Studien zur deutschen Literatur ; 85
    Subjects: Farm life in literature; Industries in literature; Liberalism in literature; Bauer <Motiv>; Zeithintergrund; Roman
    Other subjects: Gotthelf, Jeremias (1797-1854); Gotthelf, Jeremias (1797-1854); Electronic books
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (VI, 291 S.)
    Notes:

    Bibliography: pages 283-291

  6. Victorian literature and the Victorian state
    character and governance in a liberal society
    Published: c2003
    Publisher:  Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 0801881544; 9780801881541
    RVK Categories: HL 1031
    Subjects: Politique et littérature / Grande-Bretagne / Histoire / 19e siècle; Littérature et société / Grande-Bretagne / Histoire / 19e siècle; Littérature / Politique gouvernementale / Grande-Bretagne / Histoire / 19e siècle; Libéralisme / Grande-Bretagne / Histoire / 19e siècle; Problèmes sociaux dans la littérature; État dans la littérature; Libéralisme dans la littérature; Littérature anglaise / 19e siècle / Histoire et critique; LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh; Geschichte; Politics and literature; Literature and society; Literature and state; Liberalism; Social problems in literature; State, The, in literature; Liberalism in literature; English literature; Liberalismus; Englisch; Politik; Literatur
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (xv, 298 p.)
    Notes:

    Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002

    Includes bibliographical references (p. 267-286) and index

    Beyond the panopticon : the critical challenge of a liberal society -- Making the working man like me : charity, the novel, and the new poor law -- Is there a pastor in the house? : sanitary reform and governing agency in Dickens's midcentury fiction -- An officer and a gentleman : civil service reform and the early career of Anthony Trollope -- A riddle without an answer : character and education in Our mutual friend -- Dueling pastors, dueling worldviews -- Social security

    "Studies of Victorian governance have been profoundly influenced by Discipline and Punish, Michel Foucault's groundbreaking genealogy of power in modern societies. Yet, according to Lauren M.E. Goodlad, Foucault's analysis is better suited to the history of the Continent than to that of nineteenth-century Britain, with its decentralized, voluntarist institutional culture and passionate disdain for state interference. Focusing on a wide range of Victorian writing - from literary figures such as Charles Dickens, George Gissing, Harriet Martineau, J.S. Mill, Anthony Trollope, and H.G. Wells to prominent social reformers such as Edwin Chadwick, Thomas Chalmers, Sir James Kay-Shuttleworth, and Beatrice Webb - Goodlad shows that Foucault's later essays on liberalism and "governmentality" provide better critical tools for understanding the nineteenth-century British state." "Victorian Literature and the Victorian State delves into contemporary debates over sanitary, education, and civil rights reform, the Poor Laws, and the century-long attempt to substitute organized charity for state services. Goodlad's readings elucidate the distinctive quandary of Victorian Britain and, indeed, any modern society conceived in liberal terms: the elusive quest for a "pastoral" agency that is rational, all-embracing, and effective but also anti-bureaucratic, personalized, and liberatory. In this study, impressively grounded in literary criticism, social history, and political theory, Goodlad offers a timely post-Foucauldian account of Victorian governance that speaks to the resurgent neoliberalism of our own day."--Jacket

  7. Liberal epic
    the Victorian practice of history from Gibbon to Churchill
    Published: 2011
    Publisher:  University of Virginia Press, Charlottesville

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden, Hochschulbibliothek, Standort Weiden
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 0813931452; 0813931509; 9780813931456; 9780813931500
    Series: Victorian literature and culture series
    Subjects: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Literary; Geschichte; Epic literature, English; History in literature; War in literature; Liberalism in literature; Liberalism; Literature and history; Literatur; Liberalismus; Krieg <Motiv>; Englisch
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (x, 322 p.)
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

    Introduction -- The ethical-aesthetic challenge to epic: Pope, Gibbon, and Scott -- Romantic liberal epic: Southey, Byron, and Napier -- Epic history, the novel, and war in the 1850s: Thackeray, MaCaulay, and Carlyle -- Utilitarianism and the intellectual critique of war: Mill, Creasy, and Buckle -- Popeian strategies in primitive and modern war epic: Morris, Kinglake, and high Victorian liberal epic -- Liberal epic before the Great War: Hardy, Trevelyan, Tolstoy, and Keynes -- Conclusion. from liberal epic to epic liberalism: Churchill and Wedgwood -- Epilogue. the warm and visible hand of liberal epic

  8. Gotthelf im Zeitgeflecht
    Bauernleben, industrielle Revolution und Liberalismus in seinen Romanen
    Published: 1985
    Publisher:  De Gruyter, Berlin

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    TH-AB - Technische Hochschule Aschaffenburg, Hochschulbibliothek
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    Technische Hochschule Augsburg
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    Universitätsbibliothek Bamberg
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    Universitätsbibliothek der LMU München
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    Universitätsbibliothek Passau
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: German
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783110941463; 9783111878942
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: GL 4618
    Series: Studien zur deutschen Literatur ; 85
    Subjects: Farm life in literature; Industries in literature; Liberalism in literature; Bauer <Motiv>; Zeithintergrund; Roman
    Other subjects: Gotthelf, Jeremias (1797-1854); Gotthelf, Jeremias (1797-1854)
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (VI, 291 S.)
    Notes:

    Bibliography: pages 283-291

  9. Anthony Trollope's late style
    Victorian liberalism and literary form
    Published: 2016
    Publisher:  Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

    Examines the full stylistic range of the novels and biographies which Trollope explored in his final decade more

    Universitätsbibliothek Bamberg
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    Examines the full stylistic range of the novels and biographies which Trollope explored in his final decade

     

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    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780748699568
    RVK Categories: HL 4785
    Subjects: Liberalism in literature; Literarischer Stil
    Other subjects: Trollope, Anthony / 1815-1882 / Literary style; Trollope, Anthony / 1815-1882 / Criticism and interpretation; Trollope, Anthony (1815-1882)
    Scope: 1 online resource (xi, 180 pages)
    Notes:

    Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 08 Aug 2016)

    Note on editions and dates -- Introduction: Trollope's late modernity -- "Getting and spending": The aesthetic economist -- "A bond of discord": Colonialism and allegory -- "Convivial in a cadaverous fashion": Satires on sovereignty -- "Active citizens of a free state": Hellenising the history of Rome -- "The tone of today": Pedagogical paraphrases -- "An admirable shrewdness": Character and the law -- "A poise so perfect": Tact as love -- "Affectionate reserve": Tact as comedy

  10. Afterlives of modernism
    liberalism, transnationalism, and political critique
    Published: ©2011
    Publisher:  Dartmouth College Press, Hanover, N.H.

    Ostbayerische Technische Hochschule Amberg-Weiden / Hochschulbibliothek Amberg
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781611688146; 1611688140; 9781584659952
    Series: Re-mapping the transnational
    Subjects: LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General; American fiction; Liberalism in literature; Modernism (Literature); Politics and literature; Transnationalism in literature; Geschichte; Array; Literatur; Liberalismus; Transnationalisierung; Moderne
    Scope: 1 online resource (xiii, 222 pages)
    Notes:

    Introduction: the inevitable intimate connection -- Part 1. Liberal modernism and transnationalism: Naming what is inside: Gertrude Stein's use of names in Three lives; John Dos Passos's imaginary city in Manhattan transfer; Faulkner and the Southern arts of mystification in Absalom, absalom!; our invisible man: the aesthetic genealogy of U.S. diversity -- Part 2. Postwar liberalism and the new cosmopolitanism: Racism, fetishism, and the gift economy in Harper Lee's To kill a mockingbird; alien encounter: Thomas Berger's Neighbors as a critique of existential humanism; buried alive: the Native American political unconscious in Louise Erdrich's fiction; neoliberalism and the U.S. literary canon: the example of Philip Roth

  11. Romantic vagrancy
    Wordsworth and the simulation of freedom
    Published: 1995
    Publisher:  Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    A provocative account of Wordsworth's representation of walking as the exercise of imagination, Romantic Vagrancy traces a recurrent analogy between the poet in search of material and the literally dispossessed vagrants and beggars he encounters.... more

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    A provocative account of Wordsworth's representation of walking as the exercise of imagination, Romantic Vagrancy traces a recurrent analogy between the poet in search of material and the literally dispossessed vagrants and beggars he encounters. Reading Wordsworth - and Rousseau before him - from the perspective of recent debates about the political and social rights of the homeless, Celeste Langan argues that both literature and vagrancy are surprisingly rich and disturbing images of the 'negative freedom' at the heart of liberalism. Langan shows how the formal structure of the Romantic poem - the improvisational excursion - mirrors its apparent themes, often narratives of impoverishment or abandonment. According to Langan, the encounter between the beggar and the passer-by in Wordsworth's poetry does not simply reveal a social conscience or its lack; it represents the advent of the liberal subject, whose identity is stretched out between origin and destination, caught between economic and political forces and the workings of desire

     

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    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780511553509
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: HL 4905
    Series: Cambridge studies in Romanticism ; 15
    Subjects: Geschichte; Literature and society / England / History / 19th century; Homelessness in literature; Liberalism in literature; Walking in literature; Romanticism / England; Poets in literature; Imagination; Wandern; Lyrik; Landstreicher <Motiv>; Schriftsteller <Motiv>; Landstreicher; Wandern <Motiv>
    Other subjects: Wordsworth, William / 1770-1850 / Political and social views; Rousseau, Jean-Jacques (1712-1778); Wordsworth, William (1770-1850)
    Scope: 1 online resource (x, 304 pages)
    Notes:

    Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015)

    Acknowledgments -- List of abbreviations -- A methodological preamble -- Introduction -- Rousseau plays the beggar: the last words of citizen subject -- Money walks: Wordsworth and the right to wander -- Walking and talking at the same time: the 'two histories' of The Prelude (1805) -- The walking cure -- Index

  12. Making liberalism new
    American intellectuals, modern literature, and the rewriting of a political tradition
    Published: 2021
    Publisher:  Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore

    "This book maps the rise of a modern liberal culture in the United States from the 1930s to the 1960s. It shows how modern fiction writers responded to central concerns in liberal political thought, such as corporate ownership, reproductive rights,... more

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    "This book maps the rise of a modern liberal culture in the United States from the 1930s to the 1960s. It shows how modern fiction writers responded to central concerns in liberal political thought, such as corporate ownership, reproductive rights, colorblind law, and presidential character"-- A revisionist history of American liberalism, from the Great Depression to the Cold War.In Making Liberalism New, Ian Afflerbach traces the rise, revision, and fall of a modern liberalism in the United States, establishing this intellectual culture as distinct from classical predecessors as well as the neoliberalism that came to power by century's end. Drawing on a diverse archive that includes political philosophy, legal texts, studies of moral psychology, government propaganda, and presidential campaign materials, Afflerbach also delves into works by Tess Slesinger, Richard Wright, James Agee, John Dewey, Lionel Trilling, and Vladimir Nabokov. Throughout the book, he shows how a reciprocal pattern of influence between modernist literature and liberal intellectuals helped drive the remarkable writing and rewriting of this keyword in American political life. From the 1930s into the 1960s, Afflerbach writes, modern American fiction exposed and interrogated central concerns in liberal culture, such as corporate ownership, reproductive rights, color-blind law, the tragic limits of social documentary, and the dangerous allure of a heroic style in political leaders. In response, liberal intellectuals borrowed key values from modernist culture—irony, tragedy, style—to reimagine the meaning and ambitions of American liberalism. Drawing together political theory and literary history, Making Liberalism New argues that the rise of American liberal culture helped direct the priorities of modern literature. At the same time, it explains how the ironies of narrative form offer an ideal medium for readers to examine conceptual problems in liberal thought. These problems—from the abortion debate to the scope of executive power—remain an indelible feature of American politics

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781421440903; 9781421440910
    Other identifier:
    9781421440903
    Series: Hopkins studies in modernism
    Subjects: USA; Literatur; Liberalismus; Geschichte 1930-1970;
    Other subjects: American fiction / 20th century / History and criticism; Liberalism in literature; Literature and society / United States / History / 20th century; United States / Intellectual life / 20th century; Modernism (Literature) / United States; American fiction; Literature and society; Modernism (Literature); Intellectual life; United States; 1900-1999; Criticism, interpretation, etc; History; Amerikanische Literatur; USA; Literarische Stoffe, Motive und Themen; Liberalismus, Libertarismus; Konservativismus
    Scope: ix, 275 Seiten, 24 cm
    Notes:

    Preface: What We Talk about When We Talk about Liberalism; Introduction: Making Liberalism New; Part 1: A Liberal Modernism; 1. Liberalism Incorporated: Intellectuals, Abortion, and the Critique of Possessive Individualism; 2. Racial Liberalism: Native Son and the Problem of "Color-Blind" Law; Part 2: A Modern Liberalism; 3. The Inward Turn: Tragedy, Documentary, and the Making of the Postwar Liberal Imagination; 4. Ending in Style: JFK, Nabokov, and the Triumph of a Liberal Aesthetic; Conclusion: What's Left of Liberalism? (Or: What's So New about Neoliberalism?); Works Cited; Notes; Index;

  13. Incremental Realism
    postwar American fiction, happiness, and welfare-state liberalism
    Author: Esteve, Mary
    Published: [2021]
    Publisher:  Stanford University Press, Stanford, California

    Landesbibliothekszentrum Rheinland-Pfalz / Pfälzische Landesbibliothek
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9781503614376; 9781503613942
    Series: Post 45
    Subjects: History of the Americas; HISTORY / United States / 20th Century; LITERARY CRITICISM / General; American fiction - History and criticism - 20th century; Authors, American - Political and social views; Happiness in literature; Welfare state in literature; Liberalism in literature; Realism in literature
    Other subjects: Literary Criticism
    Scope: viii, 280 Seiten, 229 mm
    Notes:

    Contents and AbstractsIntroduction: The Symbolic Economy of Postwar American Happiness chapter abstract"The Symbolic Economy of Postwar American Happiness" enlists Philip Roth's paean to the Newark Public Library, alongside John Kenneth Galbraith's call for new "symbols of happiness," to set the stage for incremental realism's central proposition of keying the trope of happiness to protocols of welfare-state liberalism. It turns to four publishing events-two in 1948, two in 1971-to lay out the numerous obstacles this proposition faced owing to the vexed politics of liberalism and the problematic status of happiness: "A Life Round Table on The Pursuit of Happiness," the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, E. L. Doctorow's The Book of Daniel, and John Rawls's A Theory of Justice.-

    It concludes with preliminary discussions of incremental realism as a critical framework, with brief nods to its paradigmatic practitioners: Philip Roth, Gwendolyn Brooks, Patricia Highsmith, Mary McCarthy, Paula Fox, and Peter Taylor.; 1The Art, Sociology, and Library Politics of Happiness in Early Philip Roth chapter abstract"The Art, Sociology, and Library Politics of Happiness in Early Philip Roth" situates Roth's early fiction within the context of midcentury sociology, psychology, history, and public policy. Drawing on the commentary of public intellectuals such as C. Wright Mills, David Riesman, Lionel Trilling, and Howard Mumford Jones, the chapter documents the pervasive skepticism toward happiness as a national pursuit while also pointing to the minority viewpoint that considered happiness an imaginative ideal bearing the potential to guide Americans toward welfare-state liberalism and socioeconomic justice.-

    Focusing primarily on Goodbye, Columbus (1959), the chapter teases out Roth's commitment to municipal activism, evinced by his portrayal of the main character, a public librarian. The chapter concludes with a discussion of Saul Bellow's misguided short story, "Looking for Mr. Green" (1951), which Roth, in effect, rewrites.; 2Gwendolyn Brooks and the Welfare State chapter abstractIn "Gwendolyn Brooks and the Welfare State," that author's creative writing, autobiographies, and public career make visible the intertwined conditions of midcentury liberal subjectivity, welfare-state activism, and the literary style of incremental realism. The chapter marshals numerous nonliterary sources to make this case, including Robert Dahl and Charles Lindblom's account of procedural incrementalism, Politics, Economics, and Welfare (1953); political philosopher Harry K.-

    Girvetz's crusading promotion of political liberalism, The Evolution of Liberalism (1950); African American philosopher and journalist Marc Moreland's vehement defense of the welfare state in "The Welfare State: Embattled Concept" (1950); and social scientists Abram Kardiner and Lionel Ovesey's study of black character and personality, The Mark of Oppression (1951). But Brooks also recognized the pull of charismatic alternatives to the liberal paradigm.; 3Queer Consumerism, Straight Happiness: Patricia Highsmith's "Right Economy" chapter abstract"Queer Consumerism, Straight Happiness: Patricia Highsmith's 'Right Economy'" centers on Highsmith's novel, The Price of Salt (1952), often celebrated as the first lesbian novel with a happy ending.-

    Alongside the infrastructure of postwar American consumerism that the novel's title obliquely references, Highsmith's and Eleanor Roosevelt's awareness of each other invites consideration of how the normative propositions built into the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights help to make sense of the novel's commitment to the moral idea spelled out in Article 26, namely, of "the full development of the human personality." Such ethical norms turn out to facilitate Highsmith's project of legitimating same-sex desire. But this project also depends on Highsmith's engagement with consumerist desire, a midcentury phenomenon that provoked much public consternation.-

    Creating a kind of self-supporting circularity, Highsmith enlists consumerism to legitimate same-sex desire while also enlisting same-sex desire to legitimate consumerism.; 4Countries of Health chapter abstract"Countries of Health" takes its title from Sylvia Plath's poem, "Tulips," which crystallizes the way midcentury American writing could become entangled not only in what Susan Sontag described as a mystification of illness through "lurid metaphor" but also in the politics of actually existing health care. The chapter examines a series of novels-Trilling's The Middle of the Journey (1947), Mary McCarthy's The Group (1963), James Gunn's The Joy Makers (1961), and Paula Fox's Poor George (1967) and Desperate Characters (1970)-whose force depends on their representations of health-care systems and the value structures through which illness and health are refracted. These works help explain why welfare provisions have always been such a hard sell in the United States.-

    They register the difficulty of displacing Sontag's lurid metaphor with Galbraith's symbols of happiness.; 5Writing Mute Liberalism: Peter Taylor, the South, and Journeyman Happiness chapter abstract"Writing Mute Liberalism: Peter Taylor, the South, and Journeyman Happiness" argues that Taylor is best understood as a literary ethnographer of southern liberalism. It explores how, in stories such as "In the Miro District" (1977) and "The Elect" (1968), Taylor deploys an incrementalist style of inductive analogy and digressive anecdote to represent the suppressive conditions under which moderate liberalism circulated in the South. It examines Taylor's attentiveness to what he called "the disadvantages or injustices or cruelties" in the South.-

    With his tone of moderate civility, akin to Lionel Trilling's description of William Dean Howells, stories such as "1939" (1955), "Je Suis Perdu" (1958), and "Dean of Men" (1968) focus on men affiliated with universities and speak to the benefits of institutional liberalism-as opposed to the South's favored institution, the family, whose crippling effects are dramatized in The Death of a Kinsman (1949).; Coda: The Politics of Contemporary Happiness chapter abstract"The Politics of Contemporary Happiness" offers a highly compressed summary analysis of how the contemporary confluence of happiness science and postmodern happiness critique has resulted in the nearly total eclipse of the happiness trope's potential function as a welfare-state proposition.-

    With Richard Powers's 2009 novel Generosity as a literary touchstone, the coda argues that postmodern and poststructuralist criticism effectively collaborates with happiness science to segregate happiness from normative politics, specifically from considerations of human flourishing and welfare-state justice. It traces the parallel ascendance of happiness science's disavowal of everything political-owing largely to its behavioral and geneticist methodologies-and of postmodernism's displacement of welfare-state liberalism by a politics of recognition and/or radical deterritorialization coded as joy. Both modes of disowning normative politics serve only to strengthen what Powers suggests is technofuturism's co-optation of happiness

  14. Making liberalism new
    American intellectuals, modern literature, and the rewriting of a political tradition
    Published: 2021
    Publisher:  Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland

    "This book maps the rise of a modern liberal culture in the United States from the 1930s to the 1960s. It shows how modern fiction writers responded to central concerns in liberal political thought, such as corporate ownership, reproductive rights,... more

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    "This book maps the rise of a modern liberal culture in the United States from the 1930s to the 1960s. It shows how modern fiction writers responded to central concerns in liberal political thought, such as corporate ownership, reproductive rights, colorblind law, and presidential character"--

     

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  15. Liberalism and American literature in the Clinton era
    Published: 2022
    Publisher:  Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    Liberalism and American Literature in the Clinton Era argues that a new, post-postmodern aesthetic emerges in the 1990s as a group of American writers - including Mary Gaitskill, George Saunders, Richard Powers, Karen Tei Yamashita, and others -... more

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    Liberalism and American Literature in the Clinton Era argues that a new, post-postmodern aesthetic emerges in the 1990s as a group of American writers - including Mary Gaitskill, George Saunders, Richard Powers, Karen Tei Yamashita, and others - grapples with the political triumph of free-market ideology. The book shows how these writers resist the anti-social qualities of this frantic right-wing shift while still performing its essential gesture, the personalization of otherwise irreducible social antagonisms. Thus, we see these writers reinvent political struggles as differences in values and emotions, in fictions that explore non-antagonistic social forms like families, communities and networks. Situating these formally innovative fictions in the context of the controversies that have defined this rightward shift - including debates over free trade, welfare reform, and family values - Brooks details how American writers and politicians have reinvented liberalism for the age of pro-capitalist consensus

     

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    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781009019040
    Other identifier:
    Series: Cambridge studies in American literature and culture
    Subjects: American fiction / 20th century / History and criticism; Literature and society / United States / History / 20th century; Modernism (Literature) / United States; Liberalism in literature
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (x, 239 Seiten)
    Notes:

    Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 20 Jun 2022)

    Introduction: Try for a moment to feel this-- The varieties of American neoliberalism --"The family gone wrong": experimental literature and conservative politics -- Post-political form -- SUPERNAFTA" vs. "El Gran Mojado": alternative fictional realitites and the fight for free trade -- Afterword: then we came to the end

  16. Interwar modernism and the liberal world order
    offices, institutions, and aesthetics after 1919
    Published: 2019
    Publisher:  Cambridge University Press, Cambridge

    "This book is about modernism's role in the reconstruction of the liberal world after 1919. Once we knew how literary modernists saw that liberal world: as the Enemy. When T. S. Eliot calls interwar Britain "worm-eaten with Liberalism," when Ezra... more

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    "This book is about modernism's role in the reconstruction of the liberal world after 1919. Once we knew how literary modernists saw that liberal world: as the Enemy. When T. S. Eliot calls interwar Britain "worm-eaten with Liberalism," when Ezra Pound remarks in Guide to Kulchur that "liberalism is a running sore," when even W. H. Auden proclaims the failure of interwar liberal political institutions, they spoke for a modernist consensus: interwar liberal world order, with its commitments to progressive democratic reform, promise of rational relations between nations, and hopes for a cosmopolitan perpetual peace, merely veiled the rot of the old bourgeois order. Scholars thus traditionally understood the modernist relationship to liberal interwar government as either a directly antagonistic anti-liberalism or a displaced cultural agonism." --

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    ISBN: 9781108494564
    Subjects: Politische Literatur; Liberalismus <Motiv>; Literatur; Englisch; Literaturpolitik
    Other subjects: Modernism (Literature) / History / 20th century; English literature / 20th century / History and criticism; American literature / 20th century / History and criticism; Liberalism / History / 20th century; Liberalism in literature; Politics and literature; Literature and society / History / 20th century
    Scope: vii, 221 Seiten
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

    Introduction: modernism against the liberal world -- The queer modernist origins of interwar liberal order -- Friends and enemies: liberal order in Woolf, Wells, and Woolf -- The artist as clerk: debt, paperwork, and liberal order in T. S. Eliot -- Typewriter fiction at the Secretariat -- Black modernist internationalisms between the wars: René Maran, W. E. B. Du Bois, Jessie Fauset, and Claude McKay -- Coda: brief history of an antipathy: liberal order and modernist criticism.

  17. Literature, journalism and liberal culture, 1886 - 1916
    politics and letters
    Published: 2013
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke [u.a.]

    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Düsseldorf
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  18. Literature, journalism and the vocabularies of liberalism
    politics and letter ; 1886–1916
    Published: 2013
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke [u.a.]

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    Universitätsbibliothek Paderborn
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  19. Mme de Staël and political liberalism in France
    Published: [2018]
    Publisher:  Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore

    Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Bonn
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9789811080869
    Subjects: Liberalism in literature; Politics in literature
    Other subjects: Staël Madame de (1766-1817)
    Scope: x, 366 Seiten, 22 cm
  20. White liberal identity, literary pedagogy, and classic American realism
    Published: [2005]; © 2005
    Publisher:  Ohio State University Press, Columbus

    Universitätsbibliothek Paderborn
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  21. White writers, race matters
    fictions of racial liberalism from Stowe to Stockett
    Published: [2018]
    Publisher:  Oxford University Press, New York, NY

    Freie Universität Berlin, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
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    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin; Philologische Bibliothek, FU Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    ISBN: 9780190687229
    RVK Categories: HR 1706
    Series: Oxford studies in American literary history
    Subjects: Roman; Weiße; Rassendiskriminierung <Motiv>
    Other subjects: Liberalism in literature; American fiction / White authors / History and criticism; Race relations in literature; Race discrimination in literature; American fiction / White authors; Liberalism in literature; Race discrimination in literature; Race relations in literature; Criticism, interpretation, etc
    Scope: xi, 370 Seiten, 25 cm
  22. White writers, race matters
    fictions of racial liberalism from Stowe to Stockett
    Published: [2018]; © 2018
    Publisher:  Oxford University Press, New York, NY

    'White Writers, Race Matters' explores the popular tradition of white-authored novels about racism in America. What explains their success, and what are their limitations? This study examines these questions through rich case studies combining... more

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
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    'White Writers, Race Matters' explores the popular tradition of white-authored novels about racism in America. What explains their success, and what are their limitations? This study examines these questions through rich case studies combining biography, historical analysis, close reading, and literary theory to map the significance of this genre and its ongoing relevance

     

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    Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780190687250
    Other identifier:
    RVK Categories: HR 1706
    Series: Oxford studies in American literary history
    Subjects: Race discrimination in literature; American fiction; Race relations in literature; Liberalism in literature; Liberalism in literature; American fiction ; White authors ; History and criticism; Race relations in literature; Race discrimination in literature
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index

    Zielgruppe - Audience: Specialized

  23. Religious liberties
    anti-Catholicism and liberal democracy in nineteenth-century U.S. literature and culture
    Published: 2011
    Publisher:  Oxford University Press, New York ;

    Early U.S. literary & cultural productions often presented Catholicism as a threat not only to Protestantism but also to democracy. Religious Liberties shows that U.S. understandings of religious freedom & pluralism emerged, paradoxically, out of a... more

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    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
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    Early U.S. literary & cultural productions often presented Catholicism as a threat not only to Protestantism but also to democracy. Religious Liberties shows that U.S. understandings of religious freedom & pluralism emerged, paradoxically, out of a virulent anti-Catholicism.

     

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    Source: Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9780199893584
    Other identifier:
    Series: Imagining the Americas
    Subjects: American literature; Cultural pluralism in literature; Anti-Catholicism in literature; Religion and literature; Liberalism in literature; Democracy in literature
    Scope: 1 online resource.
    Notes:

    Includes bibliographical references and index. - Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (viewed on May 11, 2011)

  24. Consensual Fictions
    Women, Liberalism, and the English Novel
    Published: [2016]; © 2004
    Publisher:  University of Toronto Press, Toronto

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Volltext (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781442627727
    Other identifier:
    Subjects: English fiction; English fiction; Liberalism in literature; Women in literature; Liberalismus <Motiv>; Englisch; Ehe <Motiv>; Roman
    Other subjects: Oliphant, Margaret (1828-1897); Austen, Jane (1775-1817): Persuasion; Trollope, Anthony (1815-1882): He knew he was right; Richardson, Samuel (1689-1761): The history of Sir Charles Grandison
    Scope: 1 online resource
    Notes:

    Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher’s Web site, viewed Jan. 06, 2016)

    :

  25. Gotthelf im Zeitgeflecht
    Bauernleben, industrielle Revolution und Liberalismus in seinen Romanen
    Published: 1985
    Publisher:  De Gruyter, Berlin

    Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus - Senftenberg, Universitätsbibliothek
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: German
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783484180857; 9783110941463; 9783111878942
    RVK Categories: GL 4618
    Series: Studien zur deutschen Literatur ; 85
    Subjects: Farm life in literature; Industries in literature; Liberalism in literature; Bauer <Motiv>; Zeithintergrund; Roman
    Other subjects: Gotthelf, Jeremias (1797-1854); Gotthelf, Jeremias (1797-1854); Electronic books
    Scope: 1 Online-Ressource (VI, 291 S.)
    Notes:

    Bibliography: pages 283-291