TY - BOOK AU - Luck,Chad TI - The Body of Property: Antebellum American Fiction and the Phenomenology of Possession SN - 9780823267460 U1 - 813/.3093553 23 PY - 2014///] CY - New York, NY : PB - Fordham University Press, KW - American fiction KW - 18th century KW - History and criticism KW - 19th century KW - Material culture in literature KW - Personal belongings in literature KW - Property in literature KW - American Studies KW - Literary Studies KW - Philosophy & Theory KW - LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General KW - bisacsh KW - Affect KW - American Literature KW - Antebellum Culture KW - Eighteenth-Century KW - Embodiment KW - Nineteenth-Century KW - Ownership KW - Phenomenology KW - Property KW - Space N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Acknowledgments --; Introduction: Pierson v. Post and the Literary Origins of American Property --; 1. Walking the Property: Ownership, Space, and the Body in Motion in Edgar Huntly --; 2. Eating Dwelling Gagging: Hawthorne, Stoddard, and the Phenomenology of Possession --; 3. Anxieties of Ownership: Debt, Entitlement, and the Plantation Romance --; 14. Feeling at a Loss: Theft and Affect in George Lippard --; Epilogue. Wisconsin, 2004: Racial Violence and the Bodies of Property --; Notes --; Works Cited --; Index; restricted access N2 - What does it mean to own something? How does a thing become mine? Liberal philosophy since John Locke has championed the salutary effects of private property but has avoided the more difficult questions of property’s ontology. Chad Luck argues that antebellum American literature is obsessed with precisely these questions.Reading slave narratives, gothic romances, city-mystery novels, and a range of other property narratives, Luck unearths a wide-ranging literary effort to understand the nature of ownership, the phenomenology of possession. In these antebellum texts, ownership is not an abstract legal form but a lived relation, a dynamic of embodiment emerging within specific cultural spaces—a disputed frontier, a city agitated by class conflict.Luck challenges accounts that map property practice along a trajectory of abstraction and “virtualization.” The book also reorients recent Americanist work in emotion and affect by detailing a broader phenomenology of ownership, one extending beyond emotion to such sensory experiences as touch, taste, and vision. This productive blend of phenomenology and history uncovers deep-seated anxieties—and enthusiasms—about property across antebellum culture UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9780823263028?locatt=mode:legacy UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780823263028 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780823263028/original ER -