Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Southern Origins of Bohemian New York: Edward Howland, Ada Clare and Edgar Allan Poe
View through CrossRef
ABSTRACT: The first Americans to identify as artistic bohemians gathered at a Manhattan beer cellar in the 1850s. They counted Walt Whitman as one of their number, and considered Edgar Allan Poe a bohemian avant la lettre . But New York’s first bohemians were not displaced Parisians living in a section of the Latin Quarter magically transplanted to the United States. Rather, bohemianism in the United States has roots in Charleston, South Carolina—the hometown of both Ada Clare (the “Queen of Bohemia” and host of a weekly literary salon) and Edward Howland (the financial backer for the bohemians’ literary weekly, the New York Saturday Press) , as well as the setting of Poe’s “The Gold-Bug” (1843), which influenced the first literary representation of American bohemianism in Fitz-James O’Brien’s short story “The Bohemian” (1855). Charleston’s cotton plantations provided Howland and Clare with the money to fund the institutions that were essential for bohemianism to flourish: the periodical and the salon. With Poe at the imaginative center of American bohemia and Clare and Howland at its financial center, US bohemianism emerges as a complex network of people, money, and ideas circulating between the North and the South as well as New York and Paris.
Title: The Southern Origins of Bohemian New York: Edward Howland, Ada Clare and Edgar Allan Poe
Description:
ABSTRACT: The first Americans to identify as artistic bohemians gathered at a Manhattan beer cellar in the 1850s.
They counted Walt Whitman as one of their number, and considered Edgar Allan Poe a bohemian avant la lettre .
But New York’s first bohemians were not displaced Parisians living in a section of the Latin Quarter magically transplanted to the United States.
Rather, bohemianism in the United States has roots in Charleston, South Carolina—the hometown of both Ada Clare (the “Queen of Bohemia” and host of a weekly literary salon) and Edward Howland (the financial backer for the bohemians’ literary weekly, the New York Saturday Press) , as well as the setting of Poe’s “The Gold-Bug” (1843), which influenced the first literary representation of American bohemianism in Fitz-James O’Brien’s short story “The Bohemian” (1855).
Charleston’s cotton plantations provided Howland and Clare with the money to fund the institutions that were essential for bohemianism to flourish: the periodical and the salon.
With Poe at the imaginative center of American bohemia and Clare and Howland at its financial center, US bohemianism emerges as a complex network of people, money, and ideas circulating between the North and the South as well as New York and Paris.
Related Results
The Southern Origins of Bohemian New York
The Southern Origins of Bohemian New York
The first Americans to identify as artistic bohemians gathered at a Manhattan beer cellar in the 1850s. They counted Walt Whitman as one of their number, and considered Edgar Allan...
Transatlantic Doubles: Intertextual Ageing in the Early Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe and Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Transatlantic Doubles: Intertextual Ageing in the Early Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe and Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Abstract:As a literary critic, Edgar Allan Poe reviewed the writings of the Victorian man of letters Edward Bulwer-Lytton on at least four occasions in the span of six years, from ...
Structure and Water Absorption of Starch and Polyethylene-Octene Elastomer Composites
Structure and Water Absorption of Starch and Polyethylene-Octene Elastomer Composites
Four modified starches, including gelatinized starch (GS), crosslinked starch (CS), oxidized starch (OS) and esterified starch (ES), were blended with polyethylene-octene elastomer...
The Persian Face of Edgar Allan Poe
The Persian Face of Edgar Allan Poe
Abstract
This article examines the reception of Edgar Allan Poe in modern Persian literature with regard to his fiction and theory of writing. There have been scatte...
Jorge Luis Borges’s References to Edgar Allan Poe: An Annotated Bibliography, Section 1
Jorge Luis Borges’s References to Edgar Allan Poe: An Annotated Bibliography, Section 1
Throughout his distinguished career, Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges maintained a complex literary relationship with Edgar Allan Poe and his writings. Borges mentioned Poe in nu...
Jorge Luis Borges’s References to Edgar Allan Poe: An Annotated Bibliography, Section 2
Jorge Luis Borges’s References to Edgar Allan Poe: An Annotated Bibliography, Section 2
ABSTRACT: Throughout his distinguished career, Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges maintained a complex, reciprocal literary relationship with Edgar Allan Poe. Borges mentioned Poe ...
The Oxford Handbook of Edgar Allan Poe
The Oxford Handbook of Edgar Allan Poe
No American author of the early 19th century enjoys a larger international audience than Edgar Allan Poe. Widely translated, read, and studied, he occupies an iconic place in globa...

