Between 1850 and 1940, with the rise of managerial capitalism in the
United States, the most powerful businesses ceased to be family owned,
instead becoming sprawling organizations controlled by complex
bureaucracies. Sentimental literature--work written specifically to
convey and inspire deep feeling--does not seem to fit with a swiftly
bureaucratizing society. Surprisingly, though, sentimental language
persisted in American literature, even as a culture of managed systems
threatened to obscure the power of individual affect.
The Sentimental Touch explores the strange, enduring power of
sentimental language in the face of a rapidly changing culture.
Analyzing novels by Harriet Beecher Stowe, Mark Twain, Sherwood
Anderson, and Nathanael West, the book demonstrates that sentimental
language changes but remains powerful, even in works by authors who
self-consciously write against the sentimental tradition. Sentimental
language has an afterlife, enduring in American literature long after
authors and critics declared it dead, insisting that human feeling can
resist a mechanizing
culture and embodying, paradoxically, the way that literary conventions
themselves become mechanical and systematic.