American Houses: Literary Spaces of Resistance and Desire
Already in 1854, Henry David Thoreau had declared in Walden that “Most men appear never to have considered what a house is” (225). Like Thoreau, many other renowned American writers have considered what houses are and, particularly, what houses do, and they have created fictional dwellings that function not only as settings, but as actual central characters in their works.
The volume is specifically concerned with the structure, the organization, and the objects inside houses, and argues that the space defined by rooms and their contents influences the consciousness, the imaginations, and the experiences of the humans who inhabit them.
CONTENIDO
American Houses, American Literature, Rodrigo Andrés 1
PART 1: HOUSES: QUEER AFFILIATIONS AND TEMPORALITIES
The House as Alternative to Familial Space and Time in Herman Melville’s “I and My Chimney”, Rodrigo Andrés 17
Paths Well-Trodden and “Desire Lines” in Willa Cather’s The Professor’s House, Cristina Alsina Rísquez 39
Queering the American Family Home: The Aesthetics of Place and the Ethos of Domesticity in Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, Elena Ortells 58
PART 2: THE LEGACY OF THE HOUSE DIVIDED
Cape Coast Castle in the Sky: Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing and the Im/possibility of the American Dream, Cynthia Lytle 77
The Haunted Plantation: Ghosts, Graves, and Transformation as Resistance in Charles W. Chesnutt’s The Conjure Woman, Ian Green 97
A House is a House is a House: Toni Morrison’s Politics of Domesticity, Redemption and Healing in Beloved and Home, Mar Gallego 115
The Politics of Affect with/in the African American Mansion in Stephanie Powell Watts’s No One Is Coming to Save Us, Vicent Cucarella-Ramon 135
“A Lot More Deadly”: Gender and the Black Spatial Imaginary in U.S. Prison Writings, Eva Puyuelo Ureña 153
PART 3: TROUBLED BOUNDARIES OF THE DOMESTIC SPACE
Thoreau’s Unhoused, Michael Jonik 173
Too Tight for Comfort: Shipboard Distance as the Prerequisite for Personal Intimacy in Herman Melville’s White-Jacket, Arturo Corujo 190
“Maybe There’s Nobody to Shoot”: The Disappearing Landlord in 20th-Century U.S. Fiction, Cynthia Stretch 208
Woody Guthrie’s House of Earth: A Manifesto in Adobe as a Response to Houselessness and Domicide in Post-Depression Years, Carme Manuel 226
The Arrivant in Toni Morrison’s Paradise: Deviation, Iteration, Intersection, Paula Martín-Salván 244
“A house at odds with itself”: Barbara Kingsolver’s Unsheltered, Dolores Resano 266
Afterword: In a Fictional House, Wyn Kelley 283