Proust and America
The Influence of American Art, Culture and Literature on "A la recherche du temps perdu"
Distributed for Liverpool University Press
380 pages
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6 x 9
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© 2007
“It is strange,” Proust wrote in 1909, “that, in the most widely different departments . . . there should be no other literature which exercises over me so powerful an influence as English and American.” In the spirit of Proust’s admission, this engaging and critical volume offers the first comparative reading of the French novelist in the context of American art, literature, and culture. In addition to examining Proust’s key American influences—Ralph Waldo Emerson, Edgar Allen Poe, and James McNeill Whistler—Proust and America investigates the previously overlooked influence of the American neurologist George Beard, whose writings on neurasthenia and “American nervousness” contributed to the essential modernity of the author’s work.
Patrick McGuinness
"An ambitious and original book...a work of comparative literature in the proper sense" –Patrick McGuinness, University of Oxford
Peter Brooks | TLS
"Proust and America? The announced subject seems a little far-fetched, but Murphy's associative readings are well worth attending to."
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