Beautiful Deceptions: European Aesthetics, the Early American Novel, and Illusionist Art

Beautiful Deceptions: European Aesthetics, the Early American Novel, and Illusionist Art

by Philipp Schweighauser
Beautiful Deceptions: European Aesthetics, the Early American Novel, and Illusionist Art

Beautiful Deceptions: European Aesthetics, the Early American Novel, and Illusionist Art

by Philipp Schweighauser

Hardcover

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Overview

The art of the early republic abounds in representations of deception: the villains of Gothic novels deceive their victims with visual and acoustic tricks; the ordinary citizens of picaresque novels are hoodwinked by quacks and illiterate but shrewd adventurers; and innocent sentimental heroines fall for their seducers' eloquently voiced half-truths and lies. Yet, as Philipp Schweighauser points out in Beautiful Deceptions, deception happens not only within these novels but also through them. The fictions of Charles Brockden Brown, Hugh Henry Brackenridge, Susanna Rowson, Hannah Webster Foster, Tabitha Gilman Tenney, and Royall Tyler invent worlds that do not exist. Similarly, Charles Willson Peale's and Raphaelle Peale's trompe l'oeil paintings trick spectators into mistaking them for the real thing, and Patience Wright's wax sculptures deceive (and disturb) viewers.

Beautiful Deceptions examines how these and other artists of the era at times acknowledge art's dues to other social realms—religion, morality, politics—but at other times insist on artists' right to deceive their audiences, thus gesturing toward a more modern, autonomous notion of art that was only beginning to emerge in the eighteenth century. Building on Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten's definition of aesthetics as "the science of sensuous cognition" and the writings of early European aestheticians including Kant, Schiller, Hume, and Burke, Schweighauser supplements the dominant political readings of deception in early American studies with an aesthetic perspective. Schweighauser argues that deception in and through early American art constitutes a comment on eighteenth-century debates concerning the nature and function of art as much as it responds to shifts in social and political organization.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813939032
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Publication date: 09/02/2016
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.25(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Philipp Schweighauser, Professor of American and General Literatures at the University of Basel, is the author of The Noises of American Literature, 1890–1985: Toward a History of Literary Acoustics.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 1

1 Aesthetics, Politics, and the Early American Novel 13

2 Political Deceptions and Sensory Delusions 54

3 The Right to Deception 102

4 Visual Artifice 139

Conclusion 181

Notes 205

Bibliography 221

Index 243

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