Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the American Essay
- The Cambridge History of the American Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I The Emergence of the American Essay (1710–1865)
- Part II Voicing the American Experiment (1865–1945)
- 9 Writing Freedom before and after Emancipation
- 10 Social Justice and the American Essay
- 11 “Zones of Contention” in the Genteel Essay
- 12 The American Comic Essay
- 13 Nineteenth-Century American Travel Essays: Aesthetics, Modernity, and National Identity
- 14 American Pragmatism: An Essayistic Conception of Truth
- 15 The Essay in the Harlem Renaissance
- 16 The Southern Agrarians and the New Criticism
- 17 Subjective and Objective: Newspaper Columns
- 18 The Experience of Art: The Essay in Visual Culture
- 19 The Essay in American Music
- Part III Postwar Essays and Essayism (1945–2000)
- Part IV Toward the Contemporary American Essay (2000–2020)
- Recommendations for Further Reading
- Index
16 - The Southern Agrarians and the New Criticism
from Part II - Voicing the American Experiment (1865–1945)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2024
- The Cambridge History of the American Essay
- The Cambridge History of the American Essay
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- Part I The Emergence of the American Essay (1710–1865)
- Part II Voicing the American Experiment (1865–1945)
- 9 Writing Freedom before and after Emancipation
- 10 Social Justice and the American Essay
- 11 “Zones of Contention” in the Genteel Essay
- 12 The American Comic Essay
- 13 Nineteenth-Century American Travel Essays: Aesthetics, Modernity, and National Identity
- 14 American Pragmatism: An Essayistic Conception of Truth
- 15 The Essay in the Harlem Renaissance
- 16 The Southern Agrarians and the New Criticism
- 17 Subjective and Objective: Newspaper Columns
- 18 The Experience of Art: The Essay in Visual Culture
- 19 The Essay in American Music
- Part III Postwar Essays and Essayism (1945–2000)
- Part IV Toward the Contemporary American Essay (2000–2020)
- Recommendations for Further Reading
- Index
Summary
This chapter surveys the rise of New Criticism in American letters during the interwar years through the 1950s. It pays attention to the influence of two overlapping associations: the Fugitive Poets and the Nashville Agrarians. The Fugitives, a group of Vanderbilt English professors and Nashville notables, had formed in the years leading up to World War I to discuss current trends in literature and philosophy. The Agrarians, southern commentators trained in a variety of disciplines, collaborated on a symposium in the 1930s that decried the deleterious effects of industrial capitalism and promoted values that purportedly undergirded an agrarian economy. Together the two groups came to shape the tenets of New Criticism. New Critics mourned the turn away from formalist principles that had established the criteria by which one should evaluate literature. Agrarians bemoaned the demise of a set of values that ostensibly emerged from a labor system that championed family farming, property ownership, and small government. Both New Critics and Agrarians, then, engaged in reclamation projects as they sought to salvage what they believed to be all that was good and beautiful in the world.
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- The Cambridge History of the American Essay , pp. 265 - 279Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023