
Fighting Words: Polemics and Social Change in Literary Naturalism (Studies in American Literary Realism & Naturalism (Hardcover)) First Edition, First ed. Edition
Author(s): Ira Wells (Author)
- Publisher: University of Alabama Press
- Publication Date: 30 Jun. 2013
- Edition: First Edition, First ed.
- Language: English
- Print length: 208 pages
- ISBN-10: 9780817317997
- ISBN-13: 0817317996
Book Description
Ira Wells, countering the standard narrative of literary naturalism’s much-touted concern with environmental and philosophical determinism, draws attention to the polemical essence of the genre and demonstrates how literary naturalists engaged instead with explosive political and cultural issues that remain fervently debated today. Naturalist writers, Wells argues in
Fighting Words, are united less by a coherent philosophy than by an attitude, a posture of aggressive controversy, which happens to cluster loosely around particular social issues. To an extent not yet appreciated, literary naturalists took controversial―and frequently contrarian―positions on a wide range of literary, political, and social issues.Frank Norris, for instance, famously declared the innate inferiority of female novelists and frequently wrote about literature in tones suggestive of racial warfare. Theodore Dreiser once advocated, with deadly earnestness, a program of state-run infanticide for disabled or unwanted children. Richard Wright praised the Stalin-Hitler agreement of 1939 as “a great step toward peace.” While many of their arguments were irascible, attention-seeking, and self-consciously inflammatory, the combative spirit that fuelled these outbursts remains central to the canonical texts of the movement.
Wells considers Frank Norris’s
The Octopus in light of the emerging discourses of environmentalism and ecological despoliation, and examines the issue of abortion in Theodore Dreiser’s An American Tragedy. A chapter on Richard Wright’s Native Son takes issue with traditional humanistic readings of its protagonist by analysing the disturbing relationship between terrorism and lynching as a crime and punishment that resists formal incorporation into the law.By highlighting the contentious rhetoric that infuses the canonical texts of literary naturalism,
Fighting Words opens up a wide-ranging and interdisciplinary interrogation of racial, sexual, and environmental polemics in American culture.Editorial Reviews
Review
—CHOICE
“
Fighting Words is written in graceful prose and is an outstanding addition to the press’s Studies in American Literary Realism and Naturalism series.”–Gary Scharnhorst, author of more than thirty monographs or collections, including Sinclair Lewis Remembered
“Fighting Words elegantly argues the significance of polemics in three naturalist authors–Norris, Dreiser, and Wright–who were strongly influenced by H. L. Mencken’s notion of using words to ‘fight.’ It is impressive.”
–Jeanne Campbell Reesman, author of Jack London’s Racial Lives: A Critical Biography and Speaking the Other Self: American Women Writers
Wow! eBook


