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The Face of Poverty : Physiognomics, Social Mobility, and the Politics of Recognition in the Early Nineteenth-Century American Novel

Pethers, Matthew

The Face of Poverty : Physiognomics, Social Mobility, and the Politics of Recognition in the Early Nineteenth-Century American Novel Thumbnail


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Abstract

From Jacob Riis to Michael Harrington, observers of American poverty have often focused, in literal and metaphorical ways, on the faces of the economically dispossessed, finding in them a means to generate emotional responses that are more personalized than those offered by sociological data. For these social reformers, the “face of poverty” contains the potential to rectify what Harrington calls the U.S.’s pervasive “social blindness” in relation to the poor, yet despite the long tradition of such efforts to reveal “the other America” this blindness seems to persist in contemporary literary and cultural analysis. This persistent invisibility is in fact rooted in precisely the optical rhetoric that this tradition so often relies upon, a rhetoric whose origins and evasions I trace to the early nineteenth century, when modern discourses of poverty were being formulated. More specifically, I focus on the “parabolic mobility novel,” a group of fictional narratives published from 1800-1815 that typically trace the fall into poverty and eventual providentially-instigated return to wealth of bourgeois characters. Combining the theories of sympathy-as-self-identification expounded by Adam Smith with the interpretive logic of physiognomy-as-moral-interiority popularized by Johann Caspar Lavater, these novels produced a conservative model of the “politics of recognition” that, rather than involving an acknowledgment of the Other on their own terms, revolved around the projection of middle-class values onto the poor. Through their moments of anagnoristic recognition, the plots of these novels effectively established the now deeply-ingrained tendency to replace the individuality of the poor with external beliefs and assumptions.

Citation

Pethers, M. (2023). The Face of Poverty : Physiognomics, Social Mobility, and the Politics of Recognition in the Early Nineteenth-Century American Novel. J19: The Journal of Nineteenth Century Americanists, 11(1), 91-119. https://doi.org/10.1353/jnc.2023.a909297

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 3, 2023
Online Publication Date Oct 17, 2023
Publication Date 2023-04
Deposit Date Mar 10, 2023
Publicly Available Date Apr 30, 2023
Journal J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists
Print ISSN 2166-742X
Electronic ISSN 2166-7438
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 11
Issue 1
Pages 91-119
DOI https://doi.org/10.1353/jnc.2023.a909297
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/18235502
Publisher URL https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/1/article/909297
Additional Information Copyright © 2023 C19: The Society of Nineteenth-Century Americanists. This article first appeared in J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists Volume 11, Number 1, Spring 2023, pp. 91-119. Reprinted with permission by Johns Hopkins University Press.

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