Genteel rhetoric : writing high culture in nineteenth-century Boston /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Broaddus, Dorothy C.
Imprint:Columbia, S.C. : University of South Carolina Press, ©1999.
Description:1 online resource (xiii, 136 pages).
Language:English
Series:Studies in rhetoric/communication
Studies in rhetoric/communication.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11112830
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0585350418
9780585350417
1570032440
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 125-129) and index.
English.
Print version record.
Summary:Situated in mid-nineteenth-century Boston culture, Genteel Rhetoric combines history and cultural studies to examine the shaping of nineteenth-century North American rhetoric and aesthetics. The practitioners of genteel rhetoric included many of the writers who belonged to the New England school: Ralph Waldo Emerson, James Russell Lowell, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Charles Eliot Norton, and Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Harvard graduates and students of Edward T. Channing, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory from 1819 to 1851, these men were also influenced by the Unitarian rhetoric of Channing's brother, William Ellery Channing, as well as by orators such as Edward Everett.
They were part of a larger North American refinement movement - a movement interrupted by the Civil War. Broaddus argues that the genteel and coherent voices with which these writers discuss literature and high culture break apart when they begin to write about material issues related to slavery, abolition, and war against the background of growing dissent between North and South. Genteel Rhetoric examines the writers as they live through and write about the Civil War - Emerson and Lowell from a safe distance, Holmes searching for his wounded son in Maryland, and Higginson in the thick of action as colonel of the First South Carolina Volunteers, the first regiment of former slaves in the Union army.
Other form:Print version: Broaddus, Dorothy C. Genteel rhetoric. Columbia, S.C. : University of South Carolina Press, ©1999 1570032440