Distancing English: A Chapter in the History of the Inexpressible - Page Richards - Books - Ohio State University Press - 9780814256800 - October 9, 2020
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Distancing English: A Chapter in the History of the Inexpressible

Page Richards

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Distancing English: A Chapter in the History of the Inexpressible

How did fears of cultural inadequacy play out in the English language after American independence and the War of 1812? Like many of his nineteenth-century contemporaries, essayist Walter Channing suggests that the country's perceived deficiency in literature is due to a crucial overlap with England, that is, having "the same language with a nation, totally unlike it in almost every relation." In Distancing English, Page Richards shows how these concerns of language are historically interwoven with the inexpressible. Often overlooked, the topos of the inexpressible redirects the ventriloquism of the English language. From its beginning, this topos combines the hyperbole of high expectations with the failure of inadequate words. In Charles Brockden Brown or George Tucker, it can register deficiency of "character" on and off the page, establishing important strategies of decenteredness also associated with modernism. In writers such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Wallace Stevens, and John Berryman, the inexpressible seizes advantage from disadvantage. It runs through literary framing strategies and flexible shaggy dog humor. An opening to the 1855 Leaves of Grass, Walt Whitman's Preface remaps the topos andemerges as a distinguished moment in the articulation of the inexpressible.


188 pages

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released October 9, 2020
ISBN13 9780814256800
Publishers Ohio State University Press
Pages 188
Dimensions 152 × 229 × 11 mm   ·   281 g
Language English