Editorial Reviews
Review
'A welcome addition to a fascinating area of study ...' Choice
'By placing the familiar canonical works of Cooper, Hawthorne, Stowe and Melville in a carefully defined relation with contemporary legal ideology, he has illuminated both the literature and the law and has helped recover a part of our cultural history.' Donald A. Ringe, American Literature
Book Description
In Cross Examinations of Law and Literature Brook Thomas uses legal thought and legal practice as a lens through which to read some of the important fictions of antebellum America. The lens reflects both ways, and we learn as much about the literature in the context of contemporary legal concerns as we do about the legal ideologies that the fiction subverts or reveals. Successive chapters deal with Cooper's Pioneers and Hawthorne's The House of Seven Gables (property law and the image of the judiciary), Melville's "Benito Cereno" and Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin (slavery), Melville's White Jacket, Pierre and "Bartleby" (worker exploitation or wage slavery), The Confidence-Man (contracts), and finally, "Billy Budd," which examines a number of issues illustrative of the triumph of legal formalism after the Civil War.
Cross-Examinations of Law and Literature : Cooper, Hawthorne, Stowe, and Melville (Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture),Brook Thomas,Albert Gelpi,Ross Posnock,Cambridge University Press,0521409705,19th Century American Novel And Short Story,19th century,American - General,American fiction,General,History,Law and literature,Law in literature,Legal Reference / Law Profession,Literary Criticism,Special Subjects In Literature,American English,American fiction--19th century--History,Cultural studies,English,Literary Criticism & Collections / American,Novels, other prose & writers: 16th to 18th centuries,Novels, other prose & writers: 19th century,USA
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