Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 When travelers swarm forth: antebellum urban aesthetics and the contours of the political
- 2 In “the thick of the stream”: Henry James and the public sphere
- 3 A “gorgeous neutrality”: social justice and Stephen Crane's documentary anaesthetics
- 4 Vicious gregariousness: White City, the nation form, and the souls of lynched folk
- 5 A “moving mosaic”: Harlem, primitivism, and Nella Larsen's Quicksand
- 6 Breaking the waves: mass immigration, trauma, and ethno-political consciousness in Cahan, Yezierska, and Roth
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 When travelers swarm forth: antebellum urban aesthetics and the contours of the political
- 2 In “the thick of the stream”: Henry James and the public sphere
- 3 A “gorgeous neutrality”: social justice and Stephen Crane's documentary anaesthetics
- 4 Vicious gregariousness: White City, the nation form, and the souls of lynched folk
- 5 A “moving mosaic”: Harlem, primitivism, and Nella Larsen's Quicksand
- 6 Breaking the waves: mass immigration, trauma, and ethno-political consciousness in Cahan, Yezierska, and Roth
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The seventh section of George Oppen's poem Of Being Numerous (1968) appears as follows:
Obsessed, bewildered
By the shipwreck
Of the singular
We have chosen the meaning
Of being numerous.
The forty-part poem in its entirety can be read as a searching, speculative meditation on this particular section's concerns: crisis, singularity, choice, meaning, and above all numerosity. This section's syntax of narrative (the complete sentence, the present perfect verb tense), along with its testimonial collectivity (the first-person plural), gestures toward the historically persistent hold of these concerns on modern consciousness. The gesture is justifiable. In American literature, Edgar Allan Poe's “The Man of the Crowd” is often treated as the locus classicus of this inquiry into what being numerous entails. The story dramatizes one man's inexplicable attraction to crowds, an existential mystery that is compounded by the narrator-protagonist's inexplicable fascination with this one man. Oppen's lines could almost be taken as a latter-day ventriloquism of Poe's mute character, were it not for the fact that this man appears so obsessed and bewildered as to be incapable of choosing anything at all.
Choosing – or more simply exemplifying – the meaning of being numerous: this book offers a necessarily selective and truncated genealogy of this preoccupation. Its point of entry is the city crowd.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003