Intimacy in America

Intimacy in America

Dreams of Affiliation in Antebellum Literature

Peter Coviello

Offers a major rereading of the antebellum literary canon

242 Pages, 6 x 9 in

  • Paperback
  • 9780816643813
  • Published: April 4, 2005
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Intimacy in America

Dreams of Affiliation in Antebellum Literature

Peter Coviello

ISBN: 9780816643813

Publication date: April 4th, 2005

242 Pages

9 x 5

Nineteenth-century America was a sprawling new nation unmoored from precedent and the mainstays of European nationalism. In their search for nationality, Americans sought coherence in a feeling of belonging shared among diverse and scattered strangers. Reading seminal works by Thomas Jefferson, Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and Walt Whitman, Peter Coviello traces these writers' enthusiasms and their ambivalences about the dream of an intimate nationality, revealing how race and sexuality were used as vehicles for an assumed national coherence. As Coviello shows, race - and especially whiteness - functioned less as a form of identity than as a model of attachment and identification, a language of affiliation. Whiteness created an imaginary fraternity that symbolized citizenship, the ownership of property, and an affinity between strangers, which became entangled in the nation's evolving codes of sexuality. Bringing race theory and "white studies" into dialogue with questions of intimacy and affect, Covello provides a practical rapprochement between historicist and psychoanalytic methodologies. Intimacy in America gives us a new perspective on the national meanings of race and sex in American literature, as well as on the still-current dream of American-ness as an impassioned relation to far-flung, anonymous others.

Peter Coviello is associate professor of English at Bowdoin College.

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: "What Is It Then Between Us?" 1. Intimate Property: Race and the Civics of Self-Relation 2. The Melancholy of Little Girls: Poe, Pedophilia, and the Logic of Slavery 3. Bowels and Fear: Nationalism, Sodomy, and Whiteness in Moby-Dick 4. Loving Strangers: Intimacy and Nationality in Whitman Epilogue: NATION MOURNS NotesIndex