Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Here and Elsewhere
- Chapter One Summons of the Past: Hawthorne and the Theme(s) of Puritanism
- Chapter Two Cosmopolitan and Provincial: Hawthorne and theReference of American Studies
- Chapter Three Moments’ Monuments: Hawthorne and the Scene of History
- Chapter Four “Certain Circumstances”: Hawthorne and the Interest of History
- Chapter Five “Life within the Life”: Sin and Self in Hawthorne’s New England
- Chapter Six The Teller and the Tale: A Note on Hawthorne’s Narrators
- Chapter Seven A Better Mode of Evidence: The Transcendental Problem of Faith and Spirit
- Chapter Eight “Artificial Fire”: Reading Melville (Re-)reading Hawthorne
- Chapter Nine “Red Man’s Grave”: Art and Destiny in Hawthorne’s “Main-Street”
- Chapter Ten “Such Ancestors”: The Spirit of History in The Scarlet Letter
- Chapter Eleven Inheritance, Repetition, Complicity, Redemption: Sin and Salvation in The House of the Seven Gables
- Chapter Twelve “Inextricable Knot of Polygamy”: Transcendental Husbandry in Hawthorne’s Blithedale
- Chapter Thirteen Innocence Abroad: Here and There in Hawthorne’s “Last Phase”
- Index
Chapter Seven - A Better Mode of Evidence: The Transcendental Problem of Faith and Spirit
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 October 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction: Here and Elsewhere
- Chapter One Summons of the Past: Hawthorne and the Theme(s) of Puritanism
- Chapter Two Cosmopolitan and Provincial: Hawthorne and theReference of American Studies
- Chapter Three Moments’ Monuments: Hawthorne and the Scene of History
- Chapter Four “Certain Circumstances”: Hawthorne and the Interest of History
- Chapter Five “Life within the Life”: Sin and Self in Hawthorne’s New England
- Chapter Six The Teller and the Tale: A Note on Hawthorne’s Narrators
- Chapter Seven A Better Mode of Evidence: The Transcendental Problem of Faith and Spirit
- Chapter Eight “Artificial Fire”: Reading Melville (Re-)reading Hawthorne
- Chapter Nine “Red Man’s Grave”: Art and Destiny in Hawthorne’s “Main-Street”
- Chapter Ten “Such Ancestors”: The Spirit of History in The Scarlet Letter
- Chapter Eleven Inheritance, Repetition, Complicity, Redemption: Sin and Salvation in The House of the Seven Gables
- Chapter Twelve “Inextricable Knot of Polygamy”: Transcendental Husbandry in Hawthorne’s Blithedale
- Chapter Thirteen Innocence Abroad: Here and There in Hawthorne’s “Last Phase”
- Index
Summary
Concentrating on the context of the story's composition— New England in the 1840’s— this early essay is blissfully insensitive to the problem of its setting in early modern Padua. What it might well have noticed, however, is the glancing allusion to George Ripley the very first line, where “translated ‘specimens’ of the productions of M. de l’Aubepine” must surely recall Ripley's famous Specimens of Foreign Standard Literature.
From beginning to end the nineteenth century was a period of crisis for historical Christianity. No doubt God had been disappearing from men's actual experience for quite some time before that, and certainly the previous century had produced a significant amount of very articulate disbelief; but the nineteenth century has its own peculiar tone and atmosphere. The further we go, the less we are confronted by a wide separation between affirmation and denial, the more we hear the painful modern voice of doubt on all sides. If the eighteenth century is Paley against Hume, Bishop Butler against the Deists, Yale University against Tom Paine, the nineteenth century is Tennyson, Arnold, Melville. Similarly, apologetics becomes less and less the defense of specific doctrines and more and more an inquiry into what-William James would boldly come to call man's ‘‘will” or “right” to believe. In an atmosphere of widespread doubt— when argument has countered argument and proof stalemated proof— there yet remain many reasons for believing. But none of the reasons is any longer “pure” and faith is everywhere felt as a “risky” business.
True, the sense of faith one sees emerging in the nineteenth century is, though not precisely new, quite unlike the fading medieval sense. “Reason and Faith” could never again be the sort of problem it was for the scholastics. How could faith simply seek understanding when the very nature of faith had itself become the central epistemological question of the day? And more fundamentally, perhaps, how could a “faith” based on a set of preliminary “proofs” be other than a self-contradictory notion? Ironic as it seems, only when the higher criticism had cast substantial doubt on the Christian “evidences” did many people begin to feel such evidences were irrelevant even if they were perfectly trustworthy.
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- Information
- Hawthorne's Histories, Hawthorne's WorldFrom Salem to Somewhere Else, pp. 123 - 136Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2022