LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Joseph Rezek, London and the Making of Provincial Literature: Aesthetics and the Transatlantic Book Trade, 1800–1850 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015, $59.95). Pp. 286.isbn 978 0 8122 4734 3.

Photo by anthonydelanoix from unsplash

tives of settlement. Even readers familiar with the details of Poe’s life might have overlooked a simple fact that Tally points out: after Poe moved from Richmond to Charlottesville in… Click to show full abstract

tives of settlement. Even readers familiar with the details of Poe’s life might have overlooked a simple fact that Tally points out: after Poe moved from Richmond to Charlottesville in , he would never again live in a single city for more than five years, illustrating a kind of peripatetic existence uncommon among other writers. In contrast to men like Ralph Waldo Emerson and Nathaniel Hawthorne (associated with, respectively, Concord and Salem), Poe belongs to no one place and so, too, do his writings resist any movement towards teleology and conclusion. Thus, “Against the optative mood of the American Renaissance, Poe posits a terrifying perversity. Against the manifest destiny of movement directed towards settlement, Poe insists upon perpetual, unsettled movements. Against the narrative aims of knowledge and understanding, Poe offers inscrutability” (). Tally illustrates that Poe’s works repeatedly rise up to challenge readers’ expectations of purpose and genre. “MS. Found in a Bottle” (), for instance, serves to unsettle the personal narrative, providing a story that undermines that genre’s claim of enlightenment and substituting in its place confusion and uncertainty. In Poe’s “perverse vision,” Tally writes, “these familiar elements are made strange and perplexing, and the progressive march of knowledge becomes a descent into greater obscurity” (). Similarly, in his readings of “Ligeia” (), “The Fall of the House of Usher” () and “The Man of the Crowd” (), Tally shows how Poe employs the grotesque and arabesque because these genres resist clear understanding and resolution. Especially interesting is Tally’s description of Poe’s relationship with his reader, one that is almost antagonistic, with the reader “captured, captivated, and manipulated by the writer” (). From here, Tally moves to possibly his most unique and complex argument: that perhaps the “ultimate generic mode” uniting all of Poe’s works (fiction, poetry, criticism) is the practical joke (). Here his analysis of “William Wilson” () stands out, as Tally argues that, from the very start, the story reads as an elaborate joke, leaving the audience “comically, and terrifyingly, lost in the tale’s cosmopolitan wilderness” (). Also significant, he links the laughter of satire with another genre – fantasy, with alterity as its distinguishing characteristic. Poe and the Subversion of American Culture places Poe’s dissenting voice right in the center of the American tradition, but that voice, full of derisive laughter, continues to resist easy classification or control. As Tally writes, “Poe’s subterranean noises continue to trouble the sleep and dreams of American literature” (). Ultimately, this impressive book reminds us of just how much complexity Poe offers to readers, continuing to undercut and mock every prevailing narrative of American literature. As such, the book is essential for anyone interested in Poe studies, American literature, and American studies.

Keywords: literature; poe; joseph rezek; american literature; book; rezek london

Journal Title: Journal of American Studies
Year Published: 2017

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.