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My Dear Boy : Gay Love Letters Through the Centuries

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American Renaissance : Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and WhitmanAmerican Renaissance : Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman by Francis Otto Matthiessen

This is THE foundational text for anyone interested in the one of the most important (if not THE most important) periods in U.S. literary/cultural history. Published in the early 1940s, this book was a groundbreaker and a milestone in that it helped establish the idea of an "American" literature at a time when most academics scoffed at such an idea, believing that U.S. novelists, poets, and essayists were inferior to and/or derivative of Anglo-European authors.

Matthiessen is very much concerned with the idea of a native literature, and connects his own project with the concern of Emerson, Hawthorne, and Whitman over this notion--the idea that America could stand on its own, apart from Europe, artistically and intellectually, as an independent cultural force to be reckoned with (for this reason he does not include Poe, whom M. views as outside the main stream of American culture and essentially aristocratic and European, rather than democratic and American, in his outlook).

Elaborating upon the relationship of the Puritan's spiritual/intellectual/aesthetic concerns to similar (if secularized) concerns to the intellectual preoccupations of mid-19th-century writers, M. makes his case that the roughly contemporaneous achievements of Emerson, THoreau, Melville, Hawthorne, and Whitman represented a true "American Renaissance" following the earlier, more austere periods of Puritanism and the Enlightenment.

In the last 15 years or so, scholars and critics, like William V. Spanos and the New AMericanists, have begun to turn a more critical eye toward M.'s foundational text, focusing on the problematic political implications of the book's valorization of American exceptionalism and its complicity in COld War ideology. And David Reynolds has made a compelling case for the close relationship of these "great authors" to the popular culture of their day, a relationship M. largely refused to acknowledge.

These are legitimate concerns and valid arguments. In spite of the flaws in _American Renaissance_, however, it is a beautiful book, written with great insight into some of the most confounding (but nonetheless magnificent) texts ever produced. Matthiessen illuminates works like _Moby Dick_, _Leaves of Grass_, and "The Divinity School Address" with such clarity and intelligence that you can't help but be swayed and spellbound. It is a refreshing, if slightly nostalgic, break from the torturous, cold, and impersonal prose of the poststructuralists. If you are a student of American culture, you owe it to yourself to read this book. It will make an indelible impression upon you. -- Chuck Grey Jr.

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Other Matthiessen titles:

Sarah Orne Jewett
Translation, An Elizabethan Art 

    

Francis Otto Matthiessen

SCHOLAR

Matthiessen was a literary scholar and the longtime lover of Russell Cheney.  Love letters between Cheney and Matthiessen, written between 1924 - 1925 can be found in My Dear Boy : Gay Love Letters Through the Centuries by Rictor Norton (Editor).

 

Roaming the Greenwood

London Review of Books

This book review of Gregory Woods' A History of Gay Literature: The Male Tradition by Colm Tóibín mentions the relationship between Matthiessen and Cheney.

Excerpt:

Matthiessen wrote: 'Of course this life of ours is entirely new - neither of us knows a parallel case. We stand in the middle of an uncharted, uninhabited country. That there have been other unions like ours is obvious, but we are unable to draw on their experience. We must create everything for ourselves. And creation is never easy...'

 

A History of Gay Literature: The Male Tradition

By Gregory Woods

Excerpt:

It is not insignificant that in the Anglo-Saxon cultures these developments coincided with the emergence of 'English', the discipline which would ultimately replace literae humaniores (classics) in the academy. The transition from classics to English -- initially under the homophobic tutelage of Matthew Arnold -- was instrumental in determining the future of the culture of homosexuality. (It was also during this period that prose fiction took over from verse as the defining centre of 'literature'.) Just as F.R. Leavis created the 'Great Tradition' (George Eliot, Henry James, Joseph Conrad) and F.O. Matthiessen created the 'American Renaissance' (Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman) -- both critics working from clearly definable subject positions within debates on sexuality, Leavis the homophobic intellectual tough-guy opposed to nancy aestheticism, and Matthiessen himself secrecy homosexual -- so too had earlier figures like John Addington Symonds and Edward Carpenter started compiling lists in order to create the sense of 'a usable past'...

 

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