Reviews
A rich and valuable study... An important contribution to Hawthorne criticism and to debates regarding the ethical value of literature.
Densely packed, lucid, and subtle, Davis's study teases out 'the shy and sheltered positions' from which, in the words of a contemporary, he surveyed the world.
Davis's argument and his compelling readings of Hawthorne's work make a timely contribution to Hawthorne criticism and provide a notable example for the validity of reading literature from an ethical perspective.
Clark Davis sets out to offer a critique of a prevailing mode of historicist scholarship in American literary study and to contest that scholarly tradition by offering a new reading of Hawthorne's work, one grounded in a conception of the relation between writer and reader enacted in Hawthorne's writing and informed by the ethical thought of Emmanuel Levinas. The book succeeds on both counts. With the striking and often surprising account of Hawthorne's career and commitments as a writer Davis offers, Hawthorne's Shyness makes a powerful contribution both to our understanding of Hawthorne's work and to our sense of how literary scholarship might be practiced at present.