by Michael Warner (Author)
The subject of Michael Warner's book is the rise of a nation. America, he shows, became a nation by developing a new kind of reading public, where one becomes a citizen by taking ones place as writer or reader. At heart, the United States is a republic of letters, and its birth can be dated from changes in the culture of printing in the early eighteenth century The new and widespread use of print media transformed the relations between people and power in a way that set in motion the republican structure of government we have inherited.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 01 Dec 1992
ISBN 10: 0674527860
ISBN 13: 9780674527867
Book Overview: Michael Warner captures better than anyone else I know the way a new technology and the practices related to it can enable a new social formation to crystallize. In doing so Warner provides us with a terribly important lesson in how to conceive of society and more particularly how to understand the functioning of society within the condition of Western modernity. An excellent book. -- Charles Taylor, McGill University Innovative in conception, resourcefully argued, The Letters of the Republic will certainly become one of the indispensable books on eighteenth-century American literary history. [This] lucid study...is marked throughout by a distilled, mature intellection that is rare even in senior scholars and in a younger scholar's first book most extraordinary -- Lawrence Buell, Harvard University A brilliant revaluation of eighteenth-century America, a work of extraordinary learning and sustained insight, with far-reaching implications, both practical and theoretical, for the study of literature and culture through the Revolutionary and Federalist eras, and beyond. It establishes Michael Warner unquestionably as a major critic and a leading Americanist. -- Sacvan Bercovitch, Harvard University The Letters of the Republic is a highly original book of great explanatory power, one that fills a gaping hole in the secondary literature of eighteenth-century American culture and brings a theoretical sophistication to the literary history of that period rarely encountered in the scholarship this is an important and in many ways remarkable book. It is written with grace and with a broad intelligence always in evidence. -- Jay Fliegelman, Stanford University Overall, the writing is marvelously economical and precise ... The book is original without being forced; the originality lies in both the fundamental scheme and in the careful readings of particular materials. -- David Hall, Harvard University