Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Edith Wharton

View through CrossRef
Edith Wharton: Matters of Mind and Spirit, first published in 1995, makes the case for Wharton as a novelist of morals rather than of manners; a novelist who sought answers to profound spiritual and metaphysical questions. Focusing on Wharton's treatment of Anglicanism, Calvinism, Transcendentalism, and Catholicism, Carol Singley analyzes the short stories and seven novels in the light of religious and philosophical developments in Wharton's life and fiction. Singley situates Wharton in the context of turn-of-the-century science, historicism, and aestheticism, reading her religious and philosophical outlook as an evolving response to the cultural crisis of belief. She invokes the dynamics of class and gender as central to Wharton's quest, describing how the author accepted and yet transformed both the classical and Christian traditions that she inherited. By locating Wharton in the library rather than the drawing room, Matters of Mind and Spirit gives this writer her literary and intellectual due, and offers fresh ways of interpreting her life and fiction.
Cambridge University Press
Title: Edith Wharton
Description:
Edith Wharton: Matters of Mind and Spirit, first published in 1995, makes the case for Wharton as a novelist of morals rather than of manners; a novelist who sought answers to profound spiritual and metaphysical questions.
Focusing on Wharton's treatment of Anglicanism, Calvinism, Transcendentalism, and Catholicism, Carol Singley analyzes the short stories and seven novels in the light of religious and philosophical developments in Wharton's life and fiction.
Singley situates Wharton in the context of turn-of-the-century science, historicism, and aestheticism, reading her religious and philosophical outlook as an evolving response to the cultural crisis of belief.
She invokes the dynamics of class and gender as central to Wharton's quest, describing how the author accepted and yet transformed both the classical and Christian traditions that she inherited.
By locating Wharton in the library rather than the drawing room, Matters of Mind and Spirit gives this writer her literary and intellectual due, and offers fresh ways of interpreting her life and fiction.

Related Results

‘A Construction in the Void’, Formal Architecture in the Novels of Edith Wharton
‘A Construction in the Void’, Formal Architecture in the Novels of Edith Wharton
<p>Edith Wharton has been persistently framed as an author detached from the ‘modern’ twentieth century literary world she inhabited. Intellectually compromised by critical c...
Imagining the Jews Together: Shared Figures in Edith Wharton and Henry James
Imagining the Jews Together: Shared Figures in Edith Wharton and Henry James
In October of 1904, when Edith Wharton was writingThe House of Mirthand Henry James, having recently arrived in America after a twenty-two-year absence, was collecting the impressi...
Edith Wharton
Edith Wharton
Edith Wharton (b. 1862– d. 1937) was born Edith Newbold Jones to George Frederic Jones and Lucretia Stevens Rhinelander in New York City. Her upper-class family background and the ...
Re-forming Manon: A New History of Edith Wharton's 1901 Play, Manon Lescaut
Re-forming Manon: A New History of Edith Wharton's 1901 Play, Manon Lescaut
Abstract Edith Wharton's unpublished Manon Lescaut, A Play in Five Acts, has been overlooked as a significant work in Wharton's early career. Reduced to the term “ad...
Edith Wharton Changed My Life
Edith Wharton Changed My Life
Abstract In this personal essay, the author recounts five decades of reading, teaching, and being inspired by Edith Wharton’s life and work, highlighting meetings wi...
Orientalism, Modernism, and Gender in Edith Wharton’s Late Novels
Orientalism, Modernism, and Gender in Edith Wharton’s Late Novels
Given the excellent scholarship on Edith Wharton and race appearing in the last two decades, surprisingly little critical attention has been given to a racial discourse that pervad...
Wharton, Travel, and Modernity
Wharton, Travel, and Modernity
Abstract Edith Wharton loved the sensation of speed. In The Custom of the Country (1913), when Wharton writes of the “rush of physical joy” that comes from flying in...
Wharton’s Italian Women
Wharton’s Italian Women
Chapter 4 examines Wharton’s first novel, the historical fiction The Valley of Decision, in the context of Wharton’s knowledge of and appreciation for Italy that began with her fam...

Back to Top