Culture Club by Katherine Wolff

Culture Club by Katherine Wolff

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Summary

Founded in 1807, the successor to a literary club called the Anthology Society, the Boston Athenaeum occupies an important place in the early history of American Intellectual life. This work examines the genesis and early development of one of the nation's most vibrant cultural institutions.

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Culture Club by Katherine Wolff

This work examines the genesis and early development of one of the nation's most vibrant cultural institutions. Founded in 1807, the successor to a literary club called the Anthology Society, the Boston Athenaeum occupies an important place in the early history of American Intellectual life. At first a repository for books, to which works of art were later added, the Athenaeum attracted over time a following that included such literary luminaries as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry James. Yet from the outset, Katherine Wolff shows, the Boston Athenaeum was more than a library; it was also a breeding ground for evolving notions of cultural authority and American identity. Though governed by the Boston elite, who promoted it as a way of strengthening their own clout in the city, the early Athenaeum reflected conflicting and at times contradictory aims and motives on the part of its membership. On the one hand, by drawing on European aesthetic models to reinforce an exalted sense of mission, Athenaeum leaders sought to establish themselves as guardians of a nascent American culture. On the other, they struggled to balance their goals with their concerns about an Increasingly democratic urban populace. As the Boston Athenaeum opened its doors to women as well as men outside its inner circle, it eventually began to define itself against a more accessible literary institution, the Boston Public Library. Told through a series of provocative episodes and generously illustrated, ""Culture Club"" offers a more complete picture than previously available of the cultural politics behind the making of a quintessentially American institution.
The history of the Boston Athenaeum is by no means an untouched subjectMuch of this work, however, has been done either by apologists or belittlers of what are taken to be top-down initiatives. One of the great virtues of Katherine Wolff's study is the middle course it steers between partisanship and judgmentalism, underscoring the fundamental point that cultural institutions of this or any kind cannot be reduced to singular monoliths. - Lawrence Buell, author of Emerson and New England Literary Culture
An independent scholar, KATHERINE WOLFF received her PhD in American literature and history from Boston University.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781558497146
ISBN 10 1558497145
Title Culture Club
Author Katherine Wolff
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher University of Massachusetts Press
Year published 2009-09-30
Number of pages 256
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable