Reading for the Body

The Recalcitrant Materiality of Southern Fiction, 1893-1985

Title Details

Pages: 472

Illustrations: 9 b&w photos

Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 08/01/2012

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4338-9

List Price: $72.95

Hardcover

Pub Date: 08/01/2012

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4336-5

List Price: $120.95

eBook

Pub Date: 08/01/2012

ISBN: 9-780-8203-4376-1

List Price: $72.95

Reading for the Body

The Recalcitrant Materiality of Southern Fiction, 1893-1985

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Jay Watson argues that southern literary studies has been overidealized and dominated by intellectual history for too long. In Reading for the Body, he calls for the field to be rematerialized and grounded in an awareness of the human body as the site where ideas, including ideas about the U.S. South itself, ultimately happen.

Employing theoretical approaches to the body developed by thinkers such as Karl Marx, Colette Guillaumin, Elaine Scarry, and Friedrich Kittler, Watson also draws on histories of bodily representation to mine a century of southern fiction for its insights into problems that have preoccupied the region and nation alike: slavery, Jim Crow, and white supremacy; the marginalization of women; the impact of modernization; the issue of cultural authority and leadership; and the legacy of the Vietnam War. He focuses on the specific bodily attributes of hand, voice, and blood and the deeply embodied experiences of pain, illness, pregnancy, and war to offer new readings of a distinguished group of literary artists who turned their attention to the South: Mark Twain, Jean Toomer, Zora Neale Hurston, William Faulkner, Richard Wright, Katherine Anne Porter, Bobbie Ann Mason, and Walker Percy.

In producing an intensely embodied U.S. literature these writers, Watson argues, were by turns extending and interrogating a centuries-old tradition in U.S. print culture, in which the recalcitrant materiality of the body serves as a trope for the regional alterity of the South. Reading for the Body makes a powerful case for the body as an important methodological resource for a new southern studies.

A visceral and invigorating study that takes us on a fantastic voyage through southern bodies and narratives, providing superb and often startling readings of texts we thought we knew. Critically sophisticated, daring, and eloquent, Reading for the Body offers a thrilling ride for aficionados of Southern and American literature.

—John Wharton Lowe, Robert Penn Warren Professor, Louisiana State University

Reading for the Body is a landmark study of Southern literature, a magnificent work of scholarship written with crystal clarity. Theoretically sophisticated and historically grounded, Watson’s book repeatedly leads us to new insights, new illuminations. A remarkable achievement.

—Robert H. Brinkmeyer Jr., author of The Fourth Ghost: White Southern Writers and European Fascism, 1930–1950

[Reading for the Body] is certainly one of the most important books in Southern studies to appear in recent years. . . . Watson is a beautiful writer who has the uncanny ability to make the most difficult arguments surprisingly straightforward.

—Robert H. Brinkmeyer Jr., Southern Register

This work provides a powerful argument for using the body and as a methodological point of departure for southern studies. . . . Highly recommended.

—C. R. Bloss, Choice

Commended

C. Hugh Holman Award, Society for the Study of Southern Literature

About the Author/Editor

JAY WATSON is the Howry Professor of Faulkner Studies and Professor of English at the University of Mississippi. He is the author of Forensic Fictions: The Lawyer Figure in Faulkner (Georgia) and editor of Conversations with Larry Brown and Faulkner and Whiteness.