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Adopting America Carol J. Singley (Associate Professor of English, Associate Professor of English, Rutgers University (Camden))

Adopting America By Carol J. Singley (Associate Professor of English, Associate Professor of English, Rutgers University (Camden))

Summary

A literary history that considers works by Cotton Mather, Ben Franklin, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Louisa May Alcott, Edith Wharton, and others to illustrate the relationship between adoption and nation-building in American culture.

Adopting America Summary

Adopting America: Childhood, Kinship, and National Identity in Literature by Carol J. Singley (Associate Professor of English, Associate Professor of English, Rutgers University (Camden))

American literature abounds with orphans who experience adoption or placements that resemble adoption. These stories do more than recount adventures of children living away from home. They tell an American story of family and national identity. In narratives from the seventeenth to the early twentieth century, adoption functions as narrative event and trope that describes the American migratory experience, the impact of Calvinist faith, and the growth of democratic individualism. The roots of literary adoption appear in the discourse of Puritan settlers, who ambivalently took leave of their birth parent country and portrayed themselves as abandoned children. Believing they were chosen children of God, they also prayed for spiritual adoption and emulated God's grace by extending adoption to others. Nineteenth-century adoption literature develops from this notion of adoption as salvation and from simultaneous attachments to the Old World and the New. In domestic fiction of the mid-nineteenth century, adoption also reflects a focus on nurture in childrearing, increased mobility in the nation, and middle-class concerns over immigration and urbanization, assuaged when the orphan finds a proper, loving home. Adoption signals fresh starts and the opportunity for success without genealogical constraints, especially for white males, but inflected by gender and racial biases, it often entails dependency for girls and children of color. A complex signifier of difference, adoption gives voice to sometimes contradictory calls to origins and fresh beginning; to feelings of worthiness and unworthiness. In writings from Cotton Mather to Edith Wharton, it both replicates and offers an alternative to the genealogical norm, evoking ambivalence as it shapes national mythologies.

Adopting America Reviews

Singley's very timely and original re-reading of many classic texts proves once more that we students of the canon never exhaust it. Such rich books as The Scarlet Letter and Our Nig, Little Women, Summer, and others spring to new life under Singley's careful (and historically informed) analysis. An excellent addition to the burgeoning scholarship on childhood and American literature. * Linda Wagner-Martin, University of North Carolina *
Singley has produced an impressive piece of scholarship that shows the centrality of adoption issues to American literature. Adopting America should appeal not only to scholars of literature, but also to anyone interested in adoption in relation to history, sociology, psychology, or their own lives. * Marianne Novy, University of Pittsburgh *
Adopting America presents an excellent and thoroughly researched overview of a timely topic--the relation of familial constructs to forms of adoption in the literature of the United States. With readings of works by writers ranging from Ben Franklin to Edith Wharton, Singley has crafted a book that will attract scholars of American literature and culture for years to come. * Shirley Samuels, Cornell University *
Wide ranging, clearly written, and well informed, Adopting America provides detailed readings of canonical and little known adoption texts against the backdrop of Americans' changing attitudes toward child rearing and nation from Puritan times through the First World War. Carol Singley's new book is a valuable contribution to adoption studies. * Claudia Nelson, Texas A&M University *
This book succeeds admirably...through deep historical contextualization and close literary analysis of theme and form. * New England Quarterly *

About Carol J. Singley (Associate Professor of English, Associate Professor of English, Rutgers University (Camden))

Carol J. Singley is Associate Professor of English at Rutgers University, Camden. She is the author of Edith Wharton: Matters of Mind and Spirit (Cambridge, 1995) and the editor of The American Child: A Cultural Studies Reader (Rutgers UP, 2003), Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth: A Casebook (OUP, 2003) and A Historical Guide to Edith Wharton (OUP, 2003).

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION; INDEX

Additional information

NPB9780199779390
9780199779390
0199779392
Adopting America: Childhood, Kinship, and National Identity in Literature by Carol J. Singley (Associate Professor of English, Associate Professor of English, Rutgers University (Camden))
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
2011-05-26
240
N/A
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