American studies and the new historicism

This essay argues that one major reason American studies has proved resistant to the New Historicism is that its model of pouvoir-savoir, derived from Foucault, works more readily for cultures dominated by centralized power (e.g., Greenblatt's studies of Shakespeare and Renaissance c...

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Main Author: Chocano Díaz, María Gema
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Alicante 1997-11-01
Series:Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
Online Access:https://raei.ua.es/article/view/1997-n10-american-studies-and-the-new-historicism
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spelling doaj-3c079551ac034045a43b175e4f15feba2020-11-25T03:38:18ZengUniversidad de AlicanteRevista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses0214-48082171-861X1997-11-01101510.14198/raei.1997.10.024504American studies and the new historicismChocano Díaz, María Gema This essay argues that one major reason American studies has proved resistant to the New Historicism is that its model of pouvoir-savoir, derived from Foucault, works more readily for cultures dominated by centralized power (e.g., Greenblatt's studies of Shakespeare and Renaissance court culture). In the United States, with a tradition of weak and decentralized state power, the relations described by Foucault are more difficult to conceptualize. The other major reason, the essay suggests, is that the "American self' model — a Hegelian notion of "collective consciousness" that dominated American studies from Perry Miller through Bercovitch's Puritans Origins of the American Self — had a certain positive ideological value within American intellectual culture. The essay treats as a representative instance the work of Myra Jehlen, whose American Incarnation was the last major achievement of the "American self approach, and who is today the leading spirit of the Rutgers "new Americanists."https://raei.ua.es/article/view/1997-n10-american-studies-and-the-new-historicism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chocano Díaz, María Gema
spellingShingle Chocano Díaz, María Gema
American studies and the new historicism
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
author_facet Chocano Díaz, María Gema
author_sort Chocano Díaz, María Gema
title American studies and the new historicism
title_short American studies and the new historicism
title_full American studies and the new historicism
title_fullStr American studies and the new historicism
title_full_unstemmed American studies and the new historicism
title_sort american studies and the new historicism
publisher Universidad de Alicante
series Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
issn 0214-4808
2171-861X
publishDate 1997-11-01
description This essay argues that one major reason American studies has proved resistant to the New Historicism is that its model of pouvoir-savoir, derived from Foucault, works more readily for cultures dominated by centralized power (e.g., Greenblatt's studies of Shakespeare and Renaissance court culture). In the United States, with a tradition of weak and decentralized state power, the relations described by Foucault are more difficult to conceptualize. The other major reason, the essay suggests, is that the "American self' model — a Hegelian notion of "collective consciousness" that dominated American studies from Perry Miller through Bercovitch's Puritans Origins of the American Self — had a certain positive ideological value within American intellectual culture. The essay treats as a representative instance the work of Myra Jehlen, whose American Incarnation was the last major achievement of the "American self approach, and who is today the leading spirit of the Rutgers "new Americanists."
url https://raei.ua.es/article/view/1997-n10-american-studies-and-the-new-historicism
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