£45.99
Hawthorne's Romances
Social Drama and the Metaphor of Geometry
First Published in 2000
Throughout the nineteenth century, the study of geometry remained at the core of educational curricula in the United States, strongly affecting how educated Americans construed their world.
This book examines how each of Nathaniel Hawthorne's romances presents a different geometric figure that becomes representative of the work's themes and narrative designs.
These geometric figures, when approached from the perspective of Victor Turner's symbolic anthropology, serve as cultural mediators, combining geometric symbology with a unique narrative perspective to offer metaphors of personal and cultural boundaries. Friedman presents the literary text as the point of intersection among such disciplines as cultural anthropology, history, mathematics, and American literature.