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Subjects>History: Intellectual> Lafcadio Hearn's America
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LAFCADIO HEARN'S AMERICA
Ethnographic Sketches and Editorials By Lafcadio Hearn, Edited by Simon J. Bronner
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Price: $37.50
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Format: cloth
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ISBN: 978-0-8131-2229-8
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Subjects: Folklore, History: American;History: Intellectual
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Pages: 256 | Year Published: 2002 | Trim Size: 6x9 | Illustrations: illus | Discount: short |
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| Description:
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| The American essays of renowned writer Lafcadio Hearn (1850-1904)
artistically chronicle the robust urban life of Cincinnati and New Orleans.
Hearn is one of the few chroniclers of urban American life in the nineteenth
century, and much of this material has not been widely available since the
1950s. Lafcadio Hearn's America collects Hearn's stories of
vagabonds,
river people, mystics, criminals, and some of the earliest accounts available of
black and ethnic urban folklife in America. He was a frequently consulted
expert
on America during his years in Japan, and these editorials reflect on the
problems and possibilities of American life as the country entered its greatest
century. Hearn’s work, which reflects an America that is less “melting pot” than
a varied, spicy, and often exotic gumbo, provide essential background for the
study of America’s first steps away from its agrarian beginnings.
Simon J. Bronner, distinguished professor of American Studies at the
Pennsylvania State University at Harrisburg, is the author and editor of many
books and articles, including The
Carver's Art and Grasping Things: Folk
Material Culture and Mass Society in America.
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Reviews:“Serves an important function for those of us interested in
the development of America. The industrialization and urbanization of
America in the postbellum period had a profound effect on how and what
cultural influences obtained in the lives of families and individuals.”—Western
Folklore
“Rescues Hearn’s journalism, reveals its dark brilliance, and makes a strong
case for Hearn’s inclusion in any account of journalism history.”—Journalism
History
“A convenient, imaginative, informative, and important collection
of Hearn’s ethnographic writings, a superlative job of selecting and
editing.”—Louisiana History
“Makes
available much of Hearn’s best fugitive journalism. . . . Conveys a sense of
urban life in 19th-century America with the flair and vividness that one might
expect from a man who could see blues where others saw only
blue.”—Washington
Times “Capturing Hearn’s genius in this collection and
in his especially good introduction, Bronner provides a work that will be
valuable to those meeting Hearn for the first time and to more advanced
scholars
pursuing an interest in Hearn’s accomplishments.”—Choice “Reprints a
fascinating selection of Hearn’s newspaper articles published in Cincinnati and
New Orleans in which he delved into the culture and lifestyles of fishermen of
Filipino origin, Jewish butchers, Sicilians, German tannery workers and
African-American voodoo priests.”—New Orleans Times-Picayune “His
earlier
newspaper columns from 1871 to 1889, which exposed the ethnic underclass
life of
Cincinnati and New Orleans, offer a significant contribution to the historian’s
understanding of the Gilded Age.”—Ohioana Quarterly
“Many of the 32 essays collected here document the complex interplay of race,
class, ethnicity and language that continues to play out on the city’s streets to
this day.”—Cincinnati Enquirer
“Lafcadio Hearn observed a 19th century America examined by few of
his contemporaries, so this collection which makes a number of his writings
newly assessable is a welcome contribution to the study of American culture.
This well-chosen selection is ably pulled together by Simon Bronner’s
introduction, which refocuses attention on Hearn as folklorist and insightfully
points to his skills as ethnographer.”—Frank de Caro “Bronner has
succeeded
admirably in assembling and introducing a selection of ethnographic sketches
and
editorials bound to stimulate a new appreciation of Hearn as an ethnographer
of
everyday life. Bronner’s thoughtful introduction explores the niche between
journalism and ethnography as he recounts Hearn’s life and work, and Bronner
makes a persuasive case for the quality of Hearn’s work in that niche. Given
the
current blurring of the previously sharp boundaries between fiction and
ethnography, Hearn’s writings deserve the new audience Bronner’s book will
bring.”—Jay Mechling “Simon Bronner’s illuminating introduction traces
Lafcadio Hearn's early years as a newspaper reporter, a formative period in
his
career when he acted as ‘a wandering ethnographic outsider’ who carefully
documented the underside of American city life. Bronner's essay and the
writings
gathered in this edited collection establish Hearn as not only an important
critic and chronicler of American culture, but also a notable figure in
journalism history—a pioneer of the urban realism later embraced by reform
journalists such as Jacob Riis and Lincoln Steffens.”—Carolyn
Kitch
“Bronner has made a superb selection of Hearn’s shorter writings on
American culture and does a fine job placing him in the context of American
search for ‘tradition.’ Lafacadio Hearn’s America serves as an excellent entry
point for folklorists into this important figure in the history of our
discipline.”—"Journal of American Folklore
"Bronner brings together thirty-two individual sketches and editorials
that demonstrate what Bronner calls 'Hearn's ethnographic approach to
writing and his views of America.'"--Resources for American Literary
Study
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©2009 University Press of Kentucky All Rights Reserved |
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