Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: New Critical formalism and identity in Americanist criticism
- Chapter 1 Types of interest: Scottish theory, literary nationalism, and John Neal
- Chapter 2 Sensing Hawthorne: the figure of Hawthorne's affect
- Chapter 3 “Life is an ecstasy”: Ralph Waldo Emerson and A. Bronson Alcott
- Chapter 4 Laws of experience: truth and feeling in Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 2 - Sensing Hawthorne: the figure of Hawthorne's affect
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: New Critical formalism and identity in Americanist criticism
- Chapter 1 Types of interest: Scottish theory, literary nationalism, and John Neal
- Chapter 2 Sensing Hawthorne: the figure of Hawthorne's affect
- Chapter 3 “Life is an ecstasy”: Ralph Waldo Emerson and A. Bronson Alcott
- Chapter 4 Laws of experience: truth and feeling in Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Hawthorne's writing, although polished and genteel, nevertheless approaches the reader in a particularly unsettling manner, as when he states in “The Custom-House” that “the reader may smile, but must not doubt,” or allows, in “Young Goodman Brown,” the reader to determine Brown's night only a dream, “if you will.” Although Hawthorne's approaches to the reader have most often been discussed as invitations to the reader to participate in the making of meaning, I argue that Hawthorne's engagement hinges, instead, on emblem-making. Somewhat as in Neal, for Hawthorne this entails obscuring what is being represented (marginalizing rather than problematizing meaning) in order to raise questions about how the voice of a narrator solicits a certain affective experience. Experience is, furthermore, proposed out of the text's offer of conflicting vectors: reading along with the text, and taking images and ideas out and away from it. That figurative idea of a difference between moving along with and moving out and away from the text is the abstract, rather than personal, affect of Hawthorne.
The way emotion in Hawthorne emerges around the creation of emblems instead of around persons is particularly notable in “The Minister's Black Veil,” a story that first appeared in the 1836 issue of The Token. The story concerns Parson Hooper, who wears a black veil over his face, to the dismay of those who know him. The story begins with, and dwells upon, the effect of the veil upon his congregation:
“But what has good Parson Hooper got upon his face?” cried the sexton in astonishment.
All within hearing immediately turned about, and beheld the semblance of Mr. Hooper, pacing slowly in his meditative way towards the meeting-house. With one accord they started, expressing more wonder than if some strange minister were coming to dust the cushions of Mr. Hooper's pulpit …
The cause of so much amazement may appear sufficiently slight.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Formalism, Experience, and the Making of American Literature in the Nineteenth Century , pp. 74 - 108Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007