Weak Nationalisms

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Weak Nationalisms

Affect and Nonfiction in Postwar America

Douglas Dowland

288 pages
Index

Hardcover

July 2019

978-1-4962-0050-1

$55.00 Add to Cart
Paperback

July 2019

978-1-4962-1548-2

$30.00 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
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July 2019

978-1-4962-1601-4

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eBook (EPUB)
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July 2019

978-1-4962-1599-4

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About the Book

The question “What is America?” has taken on new urgency. Weak Nationalisms explores the emotional dynamics behind that question by examining how a range of authors have attempted to answer it through nonfiction since the Second World War, revealing the complex and dynamic ways in which affects shape the literary construction of everyday experience in the United States.

Douglas Dowland studies these attempts to define the nation in an eclectic selection of texts from writers such as Simone de Beauvoir, John Steinbeck, Charles Kuralt, Jane Smiley, and Sarah Vowell. Each of these texts makes use of synecdoche, and Weak Nationalisms shows how this rhetorical technique is variously driven by affects including curiosity, discontent, hopefulness, and incredulity. In exploring the function of synecdoche in the creative construction of the United States, Dowland draws attention to the evocative politics and literary richness of nationalism and connects critical literary practices to broader discussions involving affect theory and cultural representation.

 

Author Bio

Douglas Dowland is an associate professor of English at Ohio Northern University.
 
 

Praise

“In Weak Nationalisms, Douglas Dowland shows how largely a figure of speech—synecdoche—figures in the affective dimension of nationalism. . . . But where many studies of nationalism stress the obscured means through which these affective ties work, Dowland finds most interesting the ‘unmediated, tactile, sensuous engagement with the emotions’ evident in the nonfiction works he considers. With its interest in the persistence of national affect, Weak Nationalisms is a timely and important study.”—Priscilla Wald, R. Florence Brinkley Professor of English at Duke University

“How have citizens of the United States historically understood their relationship to the nation? The answer Weak Nationalisms gives is both elegantly specific and broadly compelling. This book is smart and timely. It draws out some of the most pressing issues Americans are currently tangling with in everyday life. It is an engaging, well-executed, and important book.”—Rachel Greenwald Smith, author of Affect and American Literature in the Age of Neoliberalism

Weak Nationalisms makes visible a vibrant and underappreciated trajectory of literary nonfiction about the United States. Douglas Dowland effectively and persuasively presents the ways in which a range of writers negotiate a mode of nationalistic feeling that embraces core tenets of American liberalism, while resisting and questioning the hierarchies that we often associate with nationalism. The book offers a refreshing and timely reflection on the uses of ‘weak nationalism.’”—Daniel Worden, author of Masculine Style: The American West and Literary Modernism


 

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Affected Readers in an Imagined Community
1. Moodiness: The Everyday America of Beauvoir’s America Day by Day
2. Curiosity and Its Discontents: Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley and America and Americans
3. Hopefulness: On the Road with Charles Kuralt
4. Incredulity: Reading Sarah Vowell
Conclusion: Affected Critics, the Nation, and the Limits of Critique
Source Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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