Sentiment and Celebrity: Nathaniel Parker Willis and the Trials of Literary Fame

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1998 M12 31 - 272 pages
How did the stately, republican literary world of Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper give way to the sensationalist, personality-saturated mass market society of the late nineteenth century? In answering this question, Sentiment and Celebrity tells the story of a man the New York Times once called "the most talked-about author in America." A widely admired, if controversial, master of the sentimental appeal, poet and "magazinist" Nathaniel Parker Willis (1806-1867) was a pioneer in the modern business of celebrity. In his heyday, he knew both popularity and success as few other American writers had. Willis, who became the gossip-dishing darling of the middle class and whose sister was the popular writer Fanny Fern (of Ruth Hall fame), was a shrewdly self-styled man of letters who attained international fame by publicizing the renowned figures of the day, including himself, and by playing to, or playing upon, the sentimental desires of his readers. By the 1840s, he could count himself among the nation's highest paid writers and most influential arbiters of fashion and feeling (especially with genteel women), though he could also describe himself, accurately enough, as one of the "best abused" literary men of his generation. With fame and self-promotion came unexpected, perhaps unforeseeable, burdens, and scandal followed eventually. By charting the various controversies that surrounded Willis, this book shows how the cultural and commercial impulses that fostered antebellum America's new love of fame and fashion drew sustenance from the concurrent allure of genteel cultivation and sentiment. Still, perennial tensions between desires for privacy and the invasive impulses of publicity, and between desires for sincerity and the appeal of social and commercial artifice, rendered this cultural conjunction highly unstable. Readers of Willis were both attracted to and disturbed by his written work and his very person; he introduced new possibilities for fashion, taste, and celebrity, and these new modes of thought and emotion were at once enchanting and unsettling. Because this cultural instability and the impulses that spawned it cut across a number of discourses, and because, in many ways, this double-edged quality remains central to our modern celebrity culture, Sentiment and Celebrity will appeal to students and scholars of several disciplines, among them literary studies, women's studies, sociocultural history, and communication studies. As Thomas N. Baker demonstrates in these fascinating pages, not only does Willis's story enrich our understanding of the early history of celebrity and the development of this country's literary marketplace in the years before the Civil War, it also shows how the cultural phenomena of sentiment and celebrity have gone hand in hand since their inception. Given the countless ways in which fame (literary or otherwise) continues to pervade (and pervert) the American Dream, Baker's book is a "life and times" study that speaks directly to our own lives.

From inside the book

Contents

Celebrity Comes of Age
3
Beautys Apostle
13
American Pelham
39
The Spy Who Came to Dinner
61
The Coming Aristocracy
86
Plates
114
Affairs of Honor
115
Trials of Celebrity
134
Outrageous Fictions
158
Echoes
187
Notes
193
Sources and Bibliography
227
Index
243
Copyright

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Page 91 - Credit not the old-fashioned absurdity that woman's is a secondary lot — ministering to the necessities of her lord and master ! It is a higher destiny I would award you. If your immortality is as complete, and your gift of mind as capable as ours of increase and elevation, I would put no wisdom of mine against God's evident allotment. I would charge you to water the undying bud, and give it healthy culture, and open its beauty to the sun; and then you may hope, that when your life is bound up...
Page 78 - April 26th, 1808. THE present age has discovered a desire, or rather a rage, for literary anecdote and private history, that may be well permitted to alarm one who has engaged in a certain degree the attention of the public. That I have had more than my own share of popularity, my contemporaries will be as ready to admit, as I am to confess that its measure has exceeded not only my hopes, but my merits, and even wishes. I may be thereVOL.
Page 120 - Have we not experienced the truth that ecstacy is not a fiction '! I have ; and as I will not permit myself to doubt you, am certain you have. And oh ! what an additional delight to think — no, to know, that I have made some hours happy to you. Yes, and that remembrance of me may lighten the heavy time of many an hour to come.
Page 80 - ... received in a country where the machinery of reviewing was not understood, as the voice of the English people, and an animosity for which there was no other reason, 'has been thus periodically fed and exasperated. I conceive it to be my duty as a literary man — I know it is my duty as an American — to lose no opportunity of setting my heel on the head of this reptile of criticism.
Page 225 - m twenty-two, I 'm twenty-two, — They idly give me joy, As if I should be glad to know That I was less a boy." He was young, therefore, and already famous. He came very near being very handsome. He was tall ; his hair, of light brown...
Page 62 - All the best society of London exclusives is now open to me — me ! a sometime apprentice at setting types ! me ! with but a sou in the world beyond what my pen brings me, and with not only no influence from friends at home, but a world of envy and slander at my back.
Page 39 - A judicious and limited voluptuousness,' he says, ! is necessary to the cultivation of the mind, to the polishing of the manners, to the refinement of the sentiment, and to the development of the understanding...
Page 24 - ... the earth and twisting themselves about every little thing upon it that has life, and connecting its being with our own. A moral sense is given to all things; and the materials of the earth which seemed made only for homely uses, become the teachers of our minds and ministers of good to our hearts. Here the love of beauty is made religion, and what we had falsely esteemed the indulgence of idle imaginations, is found to have higher and more serious purposes, than the staid affairs of life. The...
Page 41 - ... different circumstances were peculiar to myself. I left her, therefore, to lead the conversation, without any expression of my feelings, and, to my surprise and delight, she invariably struck their tone, and pursued the same vein of reflection. It convinced me of what I had long thought might be true— that there was, in the varieties of natural beauty, a hidden meaning, and a delightful purpose of good ; and, if I am not deceived, it is a new and beautiful evidence of the proportion and extent...

About the author (1998)

Thomas N. Baker is currently Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Centre College in Danville, Kentucky.

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