Greil Marcus & “A New Literary History of America”

From Leah Garchik’s San Francisco Chronicle column of 18 January 2008:

“A New Literary History of America” is the scholarly-sounding name of the 1,000-or-so-page volume that author /journalist /teacher /cultural critic Greil Marcus is preparing, with literature professor Werner Sollors, for Harvard University Press. But the one-volume work, to be published in 2009 and containing 220 2,500-word essays that cover the years from 1507 to Hurricane Katrina, is much juicier than that, “literature as usually understood but also political address, memoirs, legal documents, manifestos, inventions, events, music, movies, comics, theatre,” says its formal statement of purpose.

Every entry, Marcus said by phone the other day, “is catching a moment when something changed, something happened, something new occurred about how to speak democratic speech, how to define what it was.” Editorial board member David Thomson, a film historian, for example, proposed the last line from “Some Like It Hot”: “Nobody’s perfect.” “That entry,” said Marcus, “is meant to open up into the whole realm of American movie comedy, where a line like that can capture the sense of we’re making it up as we go along. It’s not only (the) essence of American comedy, but the essence of American character. Two words become a springboard for entering the book.”

Marcus, Sollors and 10 editorial members winnowed down their 600 suggestions for topics to 220, “with lots of horse trading,” he said, citing some sample winnowing conversation: “What do you mean you’re including Linda Lovelace and not Robert Frost?” Among Bay Area writers, Clark Blaise will describe an 1851 meeting, a picnic, between Herman Melville and Nathaniel Hawthorne; Anne Wagner is writing about Maya Lin’s Vietnam Memorial; Carolyn Porter is writing about 1936, the year both William Faulkner’s “Absalom, Absalom!” and Margaret Mitchell’s “Gone with the Wind” were published.

Editing will be done by the end of the summer.

Self can hardly wait, dear blog readers, to see if any of the literary history includes essays by or about Asian Americans (other than the aforementioned on Maya Lin’s Vietnam Memorial).

Stay tuned, dear blog readers, stay tuned.

2 Comments

  1. asian american said,

    September 4, 2009 at 9:44 pm

    Hi Marianne,

    It looks like the book is finally out:
    http://www.amazon.com/Literary-History-America-University-Reference/dp/0674035941

    According to the book’s website [http://www.newliteraryhistory.com/timeline.html] the _New Literary History of America_ does include essays by or about Asian Americans. Here are the entries that we were able to find on the timeline:

    1850
    The Scarlet Letter
    Bharati Mukherjee

    1969, January 11
    The first Asian Americans
    Hua Hsu

    1969, November 12
    The eye of Vietnam
    Thi Phuong-Lan Bui

    1982
    Wild Style
    Hua Hsu

    1982
    Maya Lin’s wall
    Anne Wagner

    1987
    Maxine Hong Kingston, Tripmaster Monkey
    Seo-Young Chu

    There might be other Asian American-related or -authored entries as well.

    This is exciting!

  2. September 4, 2009 at 9:55 pm

    Oh, this is wonderful news! So exciting!

    I just checked out the link and think they did a really good job with the cover, as well!


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