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“Nudity and other sensitive states”: Counterprivacy in Herman Melville’s Fiction

    1. [1] University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

      University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

      Township of Cunningham, Estados Unidos

  • Localización: American literature: A journal of literary history, criticism and bibliography, ISSN 0002-9831, ISSN-e 1527-2117, Vol. 89, Nº 4, 2017, págs. 697-726
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • This essay advances a theory of the “counterprivate” elucidated through Herman Melville’s fiction. Echoing the term counterpublic, which has done much to critique the notion of the unified public sphere, a new theory of the “counterprivate” can open out to alternative visions of privacy, a proliferation of competing and resistant modes that cannot be reducible to the domestic or the political. I situate Melville’s Typee and Pierre within an emergent nineteenth-century discourse of privacy, still prevalent today, in which one’s private life operates to develop and display one’s adherence to conventional public morality. Melville’s fiction shows us how privacy became a language of morality across the nineteenth century while at the same time imagining various counterprivate forms that resist entanglement with domesticity, property, and liberal individualism.


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