The University of Wisconsin Press
Literature & Criticism
F.O. Matthiessen and the Politics of Criticism
William E. Cain
F.O. Matthiessen remains one of America’s leading twentieth-century critics in part because the problems he and his contemporaries struggled with remain ours today. William E. Cain studies Matthiessen’s career with careful attention to biographical, institutional, literary, and political contexts. He considers Matthiessen’s many reviews and essays on literature and deals sympathetically, but critically, with Matthiessen’s attitudes toward the Cold War as revealed in his memoir, From the Heart of Europe.
Cain draws connections between Matthiessen’s criticism and the influence of significant political movements like the Popular Front of the 1930s, the Progressive Party, and Henry Wallace’s campaign for the presidency in 1948. Analyzing specific texts by Thoreau, James, Dreiser, and Melville, he confronts the difficult and highly contested relationships between literary criticism and politics, scholarship and the public sphere, pedagogy and social activism. He suggests that critics need to acknowledge the primacy of their political commitments and should proceed to teach and write accordingly. This argument, certain to prove a controversial one, will spark extensive debate and discussion about the theory and practice of intellectual work.
All students and scholars of English and American literature, American studies, black studies, and American history will welcome this original and stimulating study, the first to treat Matthiessen in fully detailed social, historical, and political contexts.
William E. Cain is professor of English at Wellesley College. He is editor of a two-volume anthology of American literature, published in 2004, and a frequent book reviewer for The Boston Globe, The New York Times, and other media. He is coeditor of The Norton Anthology of Literary Theory and Criticism.
Media & bookseller inquiries regarding review copies, events, and interviews can be directed to the publicity department at publicity@uwpress.wisc.edu or (608) 263-0734. (If you want to examine a book for possible course use, please see our Course Books page. If you want to examine a book for possible rights licensing, please see Rights & Permissions.)
October 1988
LC: 88-017275 PS
288 pp. 5 1/2 x 8 1/2
ISBN-10: 0-299-11914-9
ISBN-13: 978-0-299-11914-0
Paper $19.95 sThe 1988 cloth edition of this book is out of print, but the paperback is still available.
Add titles to your shopping cart by clicking on the "Add this book to cart" link above. You can submit your order electronically, paying for it with your credit card.
Click here for a further explanation of the shopping cart featureNever ordered from us before?
Read this first.
Home | Books | Journals | Events | Textbooks | Authors | Related | Search | Order | Contact If you have trouble accessing any page in this web site, contact our Web manager.
E-mail: webmaster@uwpress.wisc.edu.Updated September 6, 2010
© 2009, The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System