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Book Info | | | enlarge picture
| Unsettling the Literary West: Authenticity and Authorship | | Author: | Nathaniel Lewis | ISBN: | 0803229380 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | | | | | | | Book Review | | |
From the Inside Flap "A timely, important intervention in the field of western American literary and cultural studies, unique in its ambitious scope and claims. Lewiss claim that western literature more or less since its inception has been our first postmodern literature is both outrageous and dead on."Stephen Tatum, coeditor of Reading "The Virginian" in the New West. "An extraordinary book by one of the most exciting and gifted scholars of contemporary western American literature and cultural studies. The playful title forecasts his highly ambitious goal of reconceptualizing how writers, scholars, and the wider public approach western literature."Susan Bernardin, State University of New York at Oneonta. The test of western literature has invariably been: Is it real? Is it accurate? Authentic? The result is a standard anything but literary, as Nathaniel Lewis observes in this ambitious work, a wholesale rethinking of the critical terms and contextsand thus of the very natureof western writing. Why is western writing virtually missing from the American literary canon but a frequent success in the marketplace? The skewed status of western literature, Lewis contends, can be directly attributed to the strategies of the regions writers, and these strategies depend consistently on the claim of authenticity. A perusal of western American authorship reveals how these writers effectively present themselves as accurate and reliable recorders of real places, histories, and culturesbut not as stylists or inventors. The imaginative qualities of this literature are thus obscured in the name of authentic reproduction. Through a study of a set of western authors and their relationships to literary and cultural history, Lewis offers a reconsideration of the deceptive and often undervalued history of western American literature. With unequivocal admiration for the literature under scrutiny, Lewis exposes the potential for startling new readings once western writing is freed from its insistence on a questionable authenticity. His book sets out a broader system of inquiry that points writers and critics of western literature in the direction of a new and truly sustaining literary tradition.
About the Author Nathaniel Lewis is an associate professor of English at Saint Michaels College.
Unsettling the Literary West: Authenticity and Authorship
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