The postwar US political imagination coalesced around a quintessential midcentury American trope: happiness. In Incremental Realism, Mary Esteve offers a bold, revisionist literary and cultural history of efforts undertaken by literary realists, public intellectuals, and policy activists to advance the value of public institutions and the claims of socioeconomic justice. Esteve specifically focuses on era-defining authors of realist fiction, including Philip Roth, Gwendolyn Brooks, Patricia Highsmith, Paula Fox, Peter Taylor, and Mary McCarthy, who mobilized the trope of happiness to reinforce the crucial value of public institutions, such as the public library, and the importance of pursuing socioeconomic justice, as envisioned by the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights and welfare-state liberals. In addition to embracing specific symbols of happiness, these writers also developed narrative modes--what Esteve calls "incremental realism"--that made justifiable the claims of disadvantaged Americans on the nation-state and promoted a small-canvas aesthetics of moderation. With this powerful demonstration of the way postwar literary fiction linked the era's familiar trope of happiness to political arguments about socioeconomic fairness and individual flourishing, Esteve enlarges our sense of the postwar liberal imagination and its attentiveness to better, possible worlds.
Author(s): Mary Esteve
Series: Post 45
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Year: 2021
Cover
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Symbolic Economy of Postwar American Happiness
1 The Art, Sociology, and Library Politics of Happiness in Early Philip Roth
2 Gwendolyn Brooks and the Welfare State
3 Queer Consumerism, Straight Happiness: Patricia Highsmith’s “Right Economy”
4 Countries of Health
5 Writing Mute Liberalism: Peter Taylor, the South, and Journeyman Happiness
Coda: The Politics of Contemporary Happiness
Notes
Index
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