The Glorious American Essay
By Phillip Lopate
By Phillip Lopate
By Phillip Lopate
By Phillip Lopate
Category: Essays & Literary Collections | World History
Category: Essays & Literary Collections | World History
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$20.00
Oct 19, 2021 | ISBN 9780525436270
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Nov 17, 2020 | ISBN 9781524747275
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Praise
“An endlessly fortifying mixture of famous works and neglected gems that can take pride of place on anyone’s bedside table for months before its pleasures come close to being exhausted.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“A treasure trove, a word hoard, a bonanza, perfect for dipping into and rifling through. . . . Lopate has amassed a heap of marvels. . . . A superb guide to the nation’s most adventurous and searching forays into prose.”
—Los Angeles Review of Books
“Eight hundred pages of mostly delight and edification. . . . Give in to its choral quality and it’s easy to feel not just the sweep of our centuries but the dialogical nature of our grandest ideas and most persistent struggles.”
—The New York Times
“An almost embarrassing abundance of riches. . . . Readers of Lopate’s seminal 1994 anthology “The Art of the Personal Essay” will already be familiar with his skill at picking pieces that perfectly offset and interrogate each other. Diving into one of his collections is always a delightful experience.”
—Christian Science Monitor
“A feast of American thought, wit, and wisdom.”
—Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
“Phillip Lopate has captured the history of a nation speaking to itself and to the world. Lopate’s rich and expansive understanding of the form has allowed him to uncover the essayistic voice in unexpected places—the sermon, the eulogy, the political treatise. To read The Glorious American Essay is to envision the American experiment itself as a kind of essay, a narrative characterized by trial and error, triumphs and false starts. One comes away from this volume with a renewed sense of the essay’s vitality and its ability to capture the diverse and evolving consciousness of a country.”
—Meghan O’Gieblyn, author of Interior States
“In this essential and, I daresay, definitive compendium, Phillip Lopate not only revisits the classics, he offers essays you might not have realized were essays: political speeches, historical documents, the musings of writers who probably had little idea at the time that they were creating lasting art. In doing so, Lopate captures what’s most magical about this form; it’s all around us at eye level—wherever there are words you can probably find an essay—yet the right hands can take it to places you never imagined.”
—Meghan Daum, author of My Misspent Youth: Essays
“The essay form models the way we need to live now. We need to think and feel in so many directions, reject easy dogmas, test our beliefs and desires. . . . Once again and right on time, Phillip Lopate offers an indispensable anthology. The Glorious American Essay travels from debate to dreamscape, manifesto to musing, from the struggles of history to the intimacies of the solitary self. Race, gender, science, religion, art, and identity: these quests and conflicts are our legacy as Americans.”
—Margo Jefferson, author of Negroland
“A sumptuous collection . . . exquisitely curated by one of our finest essayists. An indispensable resource for all of us who love the genre.”
—Robert Atwan, series editor of The Best American Essays
“The Glorious American Essay is, quite simply, glorious reading. Lopate has curated a collection of some of the best American essays ever written. . . [T]he book demonstrates the art, the power, the beauty and the cinematic scope of the American essay in its many forms. Lopate’s introduction is a vital, eye-opening assessment of the potential and the impact of the essay and the ways in which nonfiction can inform, persuade, delight, surprise and, most importantly, enlighten the reader.”
—Lee Gutkind, author of My Last Eight Thousand Days
“The Glorious American Essay situates the essay, an inherently democratic form of art, as the citizen-genre and nothing less than the literary cornerstone of the country. The mongrel nature of the essay is its strength: a mode of adaptability fit for differing, shifting, American ideals. This book could hardly be more timely, relevant, urgent, or necessary.”
—David Shields, author of Reality Hunger
“Lopate’s look at three centuries of essays emphasizes how writers have wrestled, explicitly or sub-textually, with America’s national values.”
—Publishers Weekly’s TOP 10 new titles in Essays & Literary Criticism
“I can’t think of anyone better suited than Phillip Lopate to put together an anthology like this. It fully deserves to takes its place alongside The Art of the Personal Essay as an indispensable volume.”
—Geoff Dyer, author of Broadsword Calling Danny Boy
“Phillip Lopate is one of the most brilliant and original essayists now working. . . . He has sustained the lively openness of the student who observes and hypothesizes, refusing, admirably, to harden into the judge. . . . He is a master, and also a joy to read.”
—Louise Glück
“Phillip Lopate has earned his place at the center of our literary culture. A superb essayist, he also teaches, edits, [and] bestows order and perspective on this ever diversifying genre. The Glorious American Essay, showcases some of the best of what Whitman in another context called ‘our varied carols.’”
—Sven Birkerts, author of The Gutenberg Elegies and The Art of Time in Memoir
“A is a thrilling tour through that most elusive jungle—the American Mind—over the course of nearly 300 years. There could be no better guide than Phillip Lopate. An invaluable anthology. It should be included in the library of anyone who has even a passing interest in American literature.”
—Michael Greenberg, author of Hurry Down Sunshine
“As we struggle to come to grips with where America has come from and where it is heading, I can’t imagine a better guide than Phillip Lopate’s The Glorious American Essay. His selection of incisive essays—from Cotton Mather and Nathaniel Hawthorne through Marilynne Robinson and Zadie Smith—charts the course of the great and flawed American experiment. It’s a timely and invaluable anthology.”
—James Shapiro, author of Shakespeare in a Divided America
“What’s marvelous is the way Lopate’s anthologies—and this new American collection is no exception—manage to be not only comprehensive monuments of deep expertise, but such continuously fresh and thrilling reading companions, right through the biographical notes.”
—Jonathan Lethem, author of The Feral Detective
“Shaped by Phillip Lopate’s tremendous intellect and curiosity, The Glorious American Essay is at once monumental and companionable. The American house of prose has more windows and doors than we had imagined, making this anthology not only an education, but a joy. This is a book for the ages.”
—Rivka Galchen, author of Atmospheric Disturbances
Table Of Contents
Introduction
1. Cotton Mather, Of Poetry, and of Style (1726)
2. Jonathan Edwards, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God (1741)
3. Thomas Paine, Thoughts on the Present State of American Affairs (1776)
4. J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur, On the Situation, Feelings, and Pleasures, of an American Farmer (1782)
5. Benjamin Franklin, Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America (1784)
6. Alexander Hamilton, The Federalist No. 1 (1787)
7. Thomas Jefferson, Religion (1787)
8. Judith Sargent Murray, On the Equality of the Sexes (1790)
9. George Washington, Farewell Address (1796)
10. Washington Irving, The Author’s Account of Himself (1819).
11. John James Audubon, The Passenger Pigeon (1835)
12. Sarah Moore Grimké, On the Condition of Women in the United States (1837)
13. Edgar Allan Poe, The Philosophy of Furniture (1840)
14. Nathaniel Hawthorne, Fire-Worship (1843)
15. Ralph Waldo Emerson, Experience (1844).
16. Margaret Fuller, from Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845)
17. Frederick Douglass, To My Old Master, Thomas Auld (1848)
18. Herman Melville, Hawthorne and His Mosses (1850)
19. Martin R. Delany, Comparative Condition of the Colored People of the United States (1852)
20. Henry David Thoreau, Where I Lived, and What I Lived For (1854)
21. Oliver Wendell Holmes, from The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table (1858)
22. Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address (1865)
23. Fanny Fern, “Delightful Men” (1870)
24. Walt Whitman, Death of Abraham Lincoln (1879)
25. Henry James, The Art of Fiction (1884)
26. Charlotte Perkins Gilman, On Advertising for Marriage (1885)
27. Sui Sin Far, Leaves from the Mental Portfolio of an Eurasian (1890)
28. Jane Addams, The Subjective Necessity of Social Settlements (1892)
29. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, The Solitude of Self (1892)
30. John Muir, A Wind-Storm in the Forests (1894)
31. Stephen Crane, The Mexican Lower Classes (1895)
32. William Dean Howells, The Country Printer (1896)
33. John Burroughs, The Art of Seeing Things (1899)
34. William James, What Makes a Life Significant? (1900)
35. W. E. B. Du Bois, Of Our Spiritual Strivings (1903)
36. John Dewey, Democracy in Education (1903)
37. Mary Austin, The Basket Maker (1903)
38. Mark Twain, The Turning Point of My Life (1910)
39. Randolph Bourne, The Handicapped (1911)
40. John Jay Chapman, Coatesville (1912)
41. Agnes Repplier, The Grocer’s Cat (1912)
42. George Santayana, The Genteel Tradition in American Philosophy (1913)
43. Edith Wharton, America at War (1918)
44. Robert Cortes Holliday, An Article Without an Idea (1919)
45. Dorothy Parker, Good Souls (1919)
46. Finley Peter Dunne, The Prohibition Era (1920)
47. Willa Cather, 148 Charles Street (1922)
48. Theodore Dreiser, The City of My Dreams (1923)
49. Christopher Morley, Intellectuals and Roughnecks (1923)
50. H. L. Mencken, The Hills of Zion (1925)
51. James Weldon Johnson, The Dilemma of the Negro Author (1928)
52. Zora Neale Hurston, How It Feels to Be Colored Me (1928)
53. James Thurber, The Nature of the American Male: A Study of Pedestalism (1929)
54. Albert Einstein, The World as I See It (1931)
55. Kenneth Burke, The Status of Art (1931)
56. F. Scott Fitzgerald, My Lost City (1932)
57. Emma Goldman, Was My Life Worth Living? (1934)
58. Katharine Fullerton Gerould, An Essay on Essays (1935)
59. Gertrude Stein, What Are Master-pieces and Why Are There So Few of Them? (1936)
60. M. F. K. Fisher, Meals for Me (1937)
61. Lewis Mumford, A New York Adolescence (1937)
62. Edmund Wilson, John Jay Chapman (1938)
63. William Saroyan, Fragments (1938)
64. Clement Greenberg, Avant-Garde and Kitsch (1939)
65. Eudora Welty, Ida M’Toy (1942)
66. Hannah Arendt, We Refugees (1943)
67. Mary McCarthy, America the Beautiful (1947)
68. E. B. White, Death of a Pig (1947)
69. James Baldwin, Equal in Paris (1955)
70. Norman Mailer, The Homosexual Villain (1955)
71. Rachel Carson, The Marginal World (1955)
72. John Brinckerhoff Jackson, The Stranger’s Path (1957)
73. Paul Tillich, Invocation: The Lost Dimension in Religion (1958)
74. Susan Sontag, Against Interpretation (1964)
75. Joan Didion, Notes from a Native Daughter (1965)
76. Martin Luther King Jr., Beyond Vietnam (1967)
77. Ralph Ellison, What America Would Be Like Without Blacks (1970)
78. Loren Eiseley, The Brown Wasps (1971)
79. Nora Ephron, A Few Words About Breasts (1972)
80. Lewis Thomas, The Lives of a Cell (1974)
81. Annie Dillard, On Foot in Virginia’s Roanoke Valley (1974)
82. Adrienne Rich, Women and Honor (1975)
83. Elizabeth Hardwick, Billie Holiday (1976)
84. Edward Abbey, The Great American Desert (1977)
85. William H. Gass, On Talking to Oneself (1979)
86. Wallace Stegner, The Twilight of Self-Reliance (1980)
87. Cynthia Ozick, A Drugstore in Winter (1982)
88. Audre Lorde, The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House (1983)
89. Rolando Hinojosa, This Writer’s Sense of Place (1983)
90. Nancy Mairs, On Being a Cripple (1986)
91. Guy Davenport, On Reading (1987)
92. N. Scott Momaday, The Native Voice in American Literature (1988)
93. Marilynne Robinson, Puritans and Prigs (1994)
94. Jamaica Kincaid, In History (1997)
95. Vivian Gornick, The Princess and the Pea (1997)
96. David Foster Wallace, The View from Mrs. Thompson’s (2001)
97. Richard Rodriguez, Hispanic (2002)
98. Wayne Koestenbaum, My 1980s (2003)
99. Leonard Michaels, My Yiddish (2003)
100. Zadie Smith, Speaking in Tongues (2008)
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