Book contents
- The New Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Harriet Wilson’s Lessons
- Chapter 2 Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and the New Civil War Literary Studies
- Chapter 3 The Global South
- Chapter 4 Making It New
- Chapter 5 Law, Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies, and the Black Formalist Tradition
- Chapter 6 Conjuring Nineteenth-Century Black Environmentalism
- Chapter 7 Transitioning Queer Studies in Nineteenth-Century American Literature
- Chapter 8 New Materialisms and Scalar Collapse in Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies
- Chapter 9 Nineteenth-Century Spanish-Language Textbooks and US American Literature
- Chapter 10 The Political Functions of Reconstruction Literature, Then and Now
- Chapter 11 Echoes from the Past, Archives of the Future
- Chapter 12 Beyond the Secularization Thesis
- Chapter 13 A Periodical Masquerade
- Chapter 14 Tasteful Sketches and Tasteless Ambition
- Chapter 15 Grounding Nineteenth-Century Studies in Indigenous Studies
- Chapter 16 Cultures of Data
- Chapter 17 Rethinking Critical Geographies
- Chapter 18 Rethinking Black Speculative Fiction
- Chapter 19 The Black Pacific
- Chapter 20 “Unfeeling Stone”
- Index
Chapter 20 - “Unfeeling Stone”
Rethinking Sentimentality at the Heart of Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2025
- The New Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies
- Twenty-First-Century Critical Revisions
- The New Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Harriet Wilson’s Lessons
- Chapter 2 Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and the New Civil War Literary Studies
- Chapter 3 The Global South
- Chapter 4 Making It New
- Chapter 5 Law, Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies, and the Black Formalist Tradition
- Chapter 6 Conjuring Nineteenth-Century Black Environmentalism
- Chapter 7 Transitioning Queer Studies in Nineteenth-Century American Literature
- Chapter 8 New Materialisms and Scalar Collapse in Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies
- Chapter 9 Nineteenth-Century Spanish-Language Textbooks and US American Literature
- Chapter 10 The Political Functions of Reconstruction Literature, Then and Now
- Chapter 11 Echoes from the Past, Archives of the Future
- Chapter 12 Beyond the Secularization Thesis
- Chapter 13 A Periodical Masquerade
- Chapter 14 Tasteful Sketches and Tasteless Ambition
- Chapter 15 Grounding Nineteenth-Century Studies in Indigenous Studies
- Chapter 16 Cultures of Data
- Chapter 17 Rethinking Critical Geographies
- Chapter 18 Rethinking Black Speculative Fiction
- Chapter 19 The Black Pacific
- Chapter 20 “Unfeeling Stone”
- Index
Summary
This essay traces the study of the vexed topic of sentimentalism in long nineteenth-century American critical discourse. Over the past decades, scholars have drawn upon different disciplines and critical theories to reframe the expansive and subtle complexities of sentimentalism’s influence as mode and ideology; these investigations, under the capacious term “feeling,” sometimes dovetail with, and other times are disaggregated from, inquiries into sympathy, affect studies, the sensorium, and the history of emotions. Although the turn to affect has been seen as a way out of political overdetermination, concerns about liberatory potential and structural collusions were prefigured and informed by debates about sentimentality’s ethical bind. This essay turns to negative terms, glossing the use of “unfeeling” in Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin and then appearances of “unfeeling” and “unsympathetic” in illustrative scholarship over the last three decades for their operations and implications. The chapter then teases out the cultural politics of unfeeling from a queer, feminist of color perspective: What if one reconsiders unfeeling from the vantage point of those marginalized and not simply as hegemonic imposition? The discussion closes with Yankton Dakota writer Zitkala-Ša, reassessing the Indigenous activist’s wish, in her own words, to become “unfeeling stone.”
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- The New Nineteenth-Century American Literary Studies , pp. 297 - 308Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025