Being a Boy Again: Autobiography and the American Boy Book
by Marcia JacobsonView All Available Formats & Editions
Marcia Jacobson's Being a Boy Again identifies a literary genre that flourished between the Civil War and World War I - the American boy book. Jacobson distinguishes the boy book tradition from the didactic story for boys and the developmental autobiography of childhood, describing it as an autobiographical form that concentrates on boyhood alone. She discusses what… See more details below
Overview
Marcia Jacobson's Being a Boy Again identifies a literary genre that flourished between the Civil War and World War I - the American boy book. Jacobson distinguishes the boy book tradition from the didactic story for boys and the developmental autobiography of childhood, describing it as an autobiographical form that concentrates on boyhood alone. She discusses what gave rise to the boy book, what forms it took, what problems it addressed, and finally, why it disappeared. Jacobson finds her answers in the widespread social and economic changes of the second half of the 19th century, as well as in the personal crisis that inspired each of the boy books. She argues that key works by such writers as Thomas Bailey Aldrich, William Dean Howells, Mark Twain, Stephen Crane, and Booth Tarkington marked a nostalgic retreat to being a boy again in the face of the difficulties of being a man in 19th-century America. The interplay between the narrating male adult in these books and the child he once was results in wonderfully innovative books - all of which have at their core the narrator's confrontation with his father, the person who should have taught him how to be a man and who inevitably is found wanting. Jacobson concludes her study by looking briefly at the social and intellectual changes that brought the genre to its end. She also suggests that in its rich variety of form and texture, the boy book should be recognized as a precursor of the imaginative autobiography we associate with 20th-century writers.
Editorial Reviews
"Being a Boy Again is luminous, cogent, learned, and continually perceptive; it convincingly foregrounds a sub-genre that had deep cultural significances. More practically, it will persuade some critics that they should, for pleasure as much as professional competence, go (back ?) to Aldrich, Warner, W. D. Howells's A Boy's Town, Hamlin Garland's Boy Life on the Prairie, and at least the first Penrod book."
—American Literature
"A useful study of the psychosocial development of young males. Recommended for academic libraries, undergraduate through professional."
—CHOICE
Product Details
- ISBN-13:
- 9780817308667
- Publisher:
- University of Alabama Press
- Publication date:
- 11/28/1996
- Edition description:
- REPRINT
- Pages:
- 208
- Product dimensions:
- 8.50(w) x 5.50(h) x 0.60(d)
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