ABSTRACT

From the famous deathbed scene of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Little Eva to Mark Twain's parodically morbid poetess Emmeline Grangerford, a preoccupation with human finitude informs the texture of nineteenth-century US writing. This collection traces the vicissitudes of this cultural preoccupation with the subject of death and examines how mortality served paradoxically as a site on which identity and subjectivity were productively rethought. Contributors from North America and the United Kingdom, representing the fields of literature, theatre history, and American studies, analyze the sexual, social, and epistemological boundaries implicit in nineteenth-century America's obsession with death, while also seeking to give a voice to the strategies by which these boundaries were interrogated and displaced. Topics include race- and gender-based investigations into the textual representation of death, imaginative constructions and re-constructions of social practice with regard to loss and memorialisation, and literary re-conceptualisations of death forced by personal and national trauma.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction Curious Dreams

Representations of Death in Nineteenth-Century US Writing and Culture

part 1|93 pages

Death, Citizenship and the Politics of Mourning

chapter 1|14 pages

Chief Seattle's Afterlife

Mourning and Cross-Cultural Synthesis in Nineteenth-Century America

chapter 2|14 pages

Escaping the 'benumbing influence of a present embodied death'

The Politics of Mourning in 1850s African-American Writing

chapter 3|18 pages

Representative Mournfulness

Nation and Race in the Time of Lincoln

chapter 4|15 pages

'Stock in dead folk'

The Value of Black Mortality in Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 1

chapter 5|12 pages

'I cannot bear to be hurted any more'

Suicide as Dialectical Ideological Sign in Nineteenth-Century American Realism

chapter 6|17 pages

Rewriting the Myth of Black Mortality

W.E.B. Du Bois and Charles W. Chesnutt

part 2|48 pages

Signatures and Elegies

chapter 7|16 pages

'I think I was enchanted'

Elizabeth Barrett Browning's Haunting of American Women Poets

chapter 8|15 pages

God's Will, Not Mine

Child Death as a Theodicean Problem in Poetry by Nineteenth-Century American Women

chapter 9|14 pages

'The little coffin'

Anthologies, Conventions and Dead Children

part 3|76 pages

Cultures of Death

chapter 10|15 pages

The Fashion of Mourning

chapter 11|16 pages

'At a distance from the scene of the atrocity'

Death and Detachment in Poe's 'The Mystery of Marie Rogêt'

chapter 12|16 pages

Spectres on the New York Stage

The (Pepper's) Ghost Craze of 1863

chapter 13|11 pages

Medusa's Blinding Art

Mesmerism and Female Artistic Agency in Louisa May Alcott's 'A Pair of Eyes; or, Modern Magic'

chapter 14|14 pages

'To surprise immortality'

Spiritualism and Shakerism in William Dean Howells's The Undiscovered Country