Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The “Nature” of American Literature: Race, Place, and Textuality in John Crowe Ransom and Elizabeth Madox Roberts
View through CrossRef
“The ‘Nature’ of American Literature” explores how John Crowe Ransom and his less-studied contemporary Elizabeth Madox Roberts advanced a theory of literary objects that emerged from nature itself. This theory formed the basis of Ransom’s bid, in “Criticism, Inc.,” for disciplinary stratification and productivity. Through a set of representational practices this article gathers under the terms “natural reading” and “natural writing,” Roberts and Ransom framed valuable aesthetic objects as the product of a carefully cultivated relationship between human observers and landscape. For both, however, this rarified relationship was grounded in and served to reinforce racial hierarchy. Even as the discipline turns away from the cultural elitism associated with New Criticism, Ransom’s understanding of the literary object as natural and thus subject to disciplinary study continues to inform contemporary critical practice. This article thus invites engagement with the often submerged racial politics of the ways we constitute objects and processes of disciplinary literary studies.
Title: The “Nature” of American Literature: Race, Place, and Textuality in John Crowe Ransom and Elizabeth Madox Roberts
Description:
“The ‘Nature’ of American Literature” explores how John Crowe Ransom and his less-studied contemporary Elizabeth Madox Roberts advanced a theory of literary objects that emerged from nature itself.
This theory formed the basis of Ransom’s bid, in “Criticism, Inc.
,” for disciplinary stratification and productivity.
Through a set of representational practices this article gathers under the terms “natural reading” and “natural writing,” Roberts and Ransom framed valuable aesthetic objects as the product of a carefully cultivated relationship between human observers and landscape.
For both, however, this rarified relationship was grounded in and served to reinforce racial hierarchy.
Even as the discipline turns away from the cultural elitism associated with New Criticism, Ransom’s understanding of the literary object as natural and thus subject to disciplinary study continues to inform contemporary critical practice.
This article thus invites engagement with the often submerged racial politics of the ways we constitute objects and processes of disciplinary literary studies.
Related Results
John Crowe Ransom
John Crowe Ransom
John Crowe Ransom (b. 30 April 1888–d. 3 July 1974) was an American poet, Southern Agrarian, literary critic, and editor of the Kenyon Review, arguably the most influential “little...
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
When characters in the Fox Television sitcom The Mindy Project call Mindy Lahiri fat, Mindy sees it as a case of misidentification. She reminds the character that she is a “petite ...
Primerjalna književnost na prelomu tisočletja
Primerjalna književnost na prelomu tisočletja
In a comprehensive and at times critical manner, this volume seeks to shed light on the development of events in Western (i.e., European and North American) comparative literature ...
Robotic-Assisted Total Hip Arthroplasty in Patients Who Have Developmental Hip Dysplasia
Robotic-Assisted Total Hip Arthroplasty in Patients Who Have Developmental Hip Dysplasia
Introduction: Total hip arthroplasty (THA) in the setting of developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) presents more inherent complexities than routine primary THA for osteoarthriti...
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Abstract
The Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans (Guidelines) advises older adults to be as active as possible. Yet, despite the well documented benefits of physical a...
Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
Abstract
Context
Race is a social construct, not a biological or genetic construct, utilized to categorize people based on obser...
Roger Prim, Gentleman: Gender, Pragmatism, and the Strange Career of John Crowe Ransom
Roger Prim, Gentleman: Gender, Pragmatism, and the Strange Career of John Crowe Ransom
John Crowe Ransom’s early and mid-career writings on gender as well as the nature of the aesthetic object are both intimated related and more complicated than critics previously ha...
Ransomware Splash Screens, Loss Aversion and Trust: Insights from Behavioral Economics
Ransomware Splash Screens, Loss Aversion and Trust: Insights from Behavioral Economics
Ransomware is a fast-evolving form of cybercrime in which a ransom is demanded to restore access to a victim’s encrypted files. The business model of the criminals relies on victim...

