ECU Libraries Catalog

The perfecting of nature : reforming bodies in antebellum literature / Josh Doty.

Author/creator Doty, Josh
Format Electronic and Book
Publication InfoChapel Hill : The University of North Carolina Press, [2020]
Descriptionx, 168 pages ; 24 cm
Supplemental Content Full text available from Oxford UNC Press Titles
Subject(s)
Contents Transcendental self-culture and the horizons of bioplasticity -- Governance, race, and alimentary selfhood in Melville -- Sculpting hte body electric: exercise and self-fashioning in Walt Whitman -- Tricks of the blood: heredity and repair in Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. -- Coda: literature and neurological selfhood.
Abstract "The nineteenth century saw a marked change in how Americans viewed and understood the human corporal form. Cookbook writers drew from physiologists' studies of the nervous pathways between the stomach and the brain to promote their recipes as good for mental health. These new ways of understanding the body reflect how Americans were beginning to see the body's constituent parts as interconnected. From the Transcendentalists' idealized concept of self to the rise of Darwinian Theory after the Civil War, the era and its writers redefined the human body as a deeply reactive and malleable object. In this book, Josh Doty explores the 'plasticity' of the antebellum American body-the body's ability to react and change from interior and exterior forces-and argues that literature helped to shape the cultural reception of these ideas"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 133-163) and index.
Access restrictionAvailable only to authorized users.
Technical detailsMode of access: World Wide Web
Genre/formElectronic books.
LCCN 2020010713
ISBN9781469659602 (cloth : alk paper)
ISBN9781469659619 (paperback : alk paper)
ISBN(ebook)

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