Book contents
- Climate and American Literature
- Cambridge Themes in American Literature and Culture
- Climate and American Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Climate and Its Discontents
- Part II American Literary Climates
- Chapter 5 Climate and American Indian Literature
- Chapter 6 Colonial Climates
- Chapter 7 The Degeneration Thesis
- Chapter 8 The State of the Air in Post-Revolutionary America
- Chapter 9 The Higher Latitudes of the American Renaissance
- Chapter 10 Climate and the American West
- Chapter 11 Fictions of Health after Miasma
- Chapter 12 Naturalism, Regionalism, and Climate (In)determinism
- Chapter 13 American Modernisms and Climatology
- Chapter 14 Postmodern Climates
- Chapter 15 Frontiers of a Shrinking World
- Part III New Lines of Inquiry
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 11 - Fictions of Health after Miasma
from Part II - American Literary Climates
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 February 2021
- Climate and American Literature
- Cambridge Themes in American Literature and Culture
- Climate and American Literature
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Climate and Its Discontents
- Part II American Literary Climates
- Chapter 5 Climate and American Indian Literature
- Chapter 6 Colonial Climates
- Chapter 7 The Degeneration Thesis
- Chapter 8 The State of the Air in Post-Revolutionary America
- Chapter 9 The Higher Latitudes of the American Renaissance
- Chapter 10 Climate and the American West
- Chapter 11 Fictions of Health after Miasma
- Chapter 12 Naturalism, Regionalism, and Climate (In)determinism
- Chapter 13 American Modernisms and Climatology
- Chapter 14 Postmodern Climates
- Chapter 15 Frontiers of a Shrinking World
- Part III New Lines of Inquiry
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter reads the late nineteenth-century genres of American naturalism and regionalism through the prism of climate, and finds that their authors depict characters whose characteristics are shaped by their responses to their ambient environments, including climate, and by the inherited effects of their ancestors’ adaptations to theirs. It argues that their thinking about climate was informed by the popular Lamarckian science of their post-Darwinian evolutionary era, by the climate theory of the historian Hippolyte Taine, and by turn-of-the-century geography. In the decades during which Frank Norris, Charles Chesnutt, Edith Wharton, and Hamlin Garland were at work on questions of determinism and/or a “determined indeterminacy,” climatic, genetic, medico-psychiatric, and sociological models of identity vied for authority. The writers drew their representations of the making of Americans from these competing claims.
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- Climate and American Literature , pp. 194 - 209Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021