"A form of life in which art is not art": "Life in the Iron Mills" and the Artist as Worker in the Nineteenth-Century United States.

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  • Author(s): Tomc, Sandra
  • Source:
    American Literature. Sep2017, Vol. 89 Issue 3, p497-527. 31p.
  • Additional Information
    • Subject Terms:
    • Abstract:
      This essay examines early nineteenth-century US literature that fought for increased compensation and copyright protection for authors. Instead of dismissing this literature as a form of complaint, as many scholars do, I take writers' concerns seriously, but I also look at the difficulty even professional writers faced in mounting any kind of case for themselves as paid creative personnel. Even when writers made a rational argument to explain why they should be paid more, they tended to undermine themselves, invariably intimating that writers as a group were better off impoverished. These difficulties, I argue, arose not just from the systems of industrial publishing but also from the systems of political value instituted by art in what Jacques Rancière calls the "aesthetic regime." I pursue this hypothesis by examining contemporary texts that argue for authors' rights alongside Rebecca Harding Davis's tale of tragic artistic labor, "Life in the Iron Mills." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
    • Abstract:
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