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Too isolated, too insular: American Literature and the World

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Too isolated, too insular: American Literature and the World

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Abstract

Are American authors homers? Do they devote too much of their attention to American concerns and settings? Is American literature as a whole different from other national literatures in its degree of self-interest? We attempt to answer these questions, and to address related issues of national literary identity, by examining the distribution of geo-graphic usage in more than 100,000 volumes of American, British, and other English-language fiction published between 1850 and 2009. We offer four principal findings: American literature consistently features greater domestic attention than does British literature; American literature is, nevertheless, significantly concerned with global loca-tions; politics and other international conflicts are meaningful drivers of changing literary attention in American and British fiction alike; and prize-nominated books are the only examined subclass of American fiction that has become significantly more international in the decades after World War II, a fact that may account for readers’ unfounded percep-tion of a similar overall shift in American literature.

How to Cite:

Wilkens, M., (2021) “Too isolated, too insular: American Literature and the World”, Journal of Cultural Analytics 6(3). https://doi.org/10.22148/001c.25273 (external link, opens in new tab).

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