Liberty of the Imagination - Aesthetic Theory, Literary Form, and
Politics in the Early United States
Book description
In Liberty of the Imagination, Edward Cahill uncovers the
surprisingly powerful impact of eighteenth-century theories of the
imagination-philosophical ideas about aesthetic pleasure, taste,
genius, the beautiful, and the sublime-on American writing from the
Revolutionary era to the early nineteenth century. Far from being too
busy with politics and commerce or too anxious about the morality of
pleasure, American writers consistently turned to ideas of the
imagination in order to comprehend natural and artistic objects,
social formations, and political institutions. Cahill argues that
conceptual tensions within aesthetic theory rendered it an evocative
language for describing the challenges of American political liberty
and confronting the many contradictions of nation formation. His
analyses reveal the centrality of aesthetics to key political debates
during the colonial crisis, the Revolution, Constitutional
ratification, and the advent of Jeffersonian democracy.
Exploring the relevance of aesthetic ideas to a range of
literary genres-poetry, novels, political writing, natural history
writing, and literary criticism-Cahill makes illuminating connections
between intellectual and political history and the idiosyncratic
formal tendencies of early national texts. In doing so, Liberty of
the Imagination manifests the linguistic and intellectual
richness of an underappreciated literary tradition and offers an
original account of the continuity between Revolutionary writing and
nineteenth-century literary romanticism.
"A masterful account of the transatlantic flow of ideas and
the way in which American writers of the Revolutionary and early
national periods used those aesthetic arguments to imagine a
nation."-Leonard Tennenhouse, Duke University
Edward Cahill is Associate Professor of English at Fordham
University.