The poetics of the Antarctic : a study in nineteenth-century American cultural perceptions
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The poetics of the Antarctic : a study in nineteenth-century American cultural perceptions
(Garland studies in nineteenth-century American literature, v. 5)(Garland reference library of the humanities, v. 1785)
Garland Pub., 1995
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 173-190) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The thesis of this book is that the 19th-century interest in the Antarctic functions for modern scholars as an important index to American self-discovery and self-definition from the 1830s onward. According to the author, American hopes for confirming identity came to be focused on an unlikely goal, the discovery of the illusive Antarctic continent. By examining in detail one literary product of the U.S. Exploring Expedition (1838-1842) to Antarctica, James Croxall Palmer's epic poem Thulia: A Tale of the Antarctic (1843), and its revision, The Antarctic Mariner's Song (1868), and by locating these works within their cultural context, Lenz reveals the significance and changing meaning of exploration to emerging American concepts of nationhood. The volume also considers the tradition of American sea fiction in the works of such writers as James Fenimore Cooper, Edgar Allan Poe, and Herman Melville, arguing that for these writers the Antarctic was a locus of symbolic meaning while for Palmer it was a process of individual and collective perception. The 1868 version of the Palmer poem is attached here as an appendix. A useful bibliography follows that appendix.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Antarctic Exploration and American Nationalism Chapter 2: The Tradition of American Sea Fiction and the Antarctic Chapter 3: The Poetics of the Antarctic: James Croxall Palmer's Thulia: A Tale of the Antarctic (1843) Chapter 4: The Fictive Imagination and the Antarctic Chapter 5: Antarctic Redux: Palmer's Antarctic Mariner's Song (1868), Conclusion, Appendix: Text of Antarctic Mariner's Song (1868)
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