University of Nebraska Press
Date of this Version
Spring 2013
Abstract
Founded in 1868, the Overland Monthly was a San Francisco–based literary magazine whose mix of humor, pathos, and romantic nostalgia for a lost frontier was an immediate sensation on the East Coast. Due in part to a regional desire to attract settlers and financial investment, the essays and short fiction published in the Overland Monthly often portrayed the American West as a civilized evolution of, and not a savage regression from, eastern bourgeois modernity and democracy.
Stories about the American West have for centuries been integral to the way we imagine freedom, the individual, and the possibility for alternate political realities. Reading for Liberalism examines the shifting literary and narrative construction of liberal selfhood in California in the late nineteenth century through case studies of a number of western American writers who wrote for theOverland Monthly, including Noah Brooks, Ina Coolbrith, Bret Harte, Jack London, John Muir, and Frank Norris, among others. Reading for Liberalismargues that Harte, the magazine’s founding editor, and the other members of theOverland group critiqued and reimagined the often invisible fabric of American freedom. Reading for Liberalism uncovers and examines in the text of theOverland Monthly the relationship between wilderness, literature, race, and the production of individual freedom in late nineteenth-century California.
Comments
© 2013 by the Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska
http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/product/Reading-for-Liberalism,675627.aspx