Lexington Books
Pages: 234
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-5419-0 • Hardback • February 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-5420-6 • eBook • February 2018 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
Elizabeth Amato is assistant professor of political science at Gardner-Webb University.
Chapter 1: Understanding the Pursuit of Happiness
Chapter 2: Tom Wolfe’s Status Hungry America
Chapter 3: Walker Percy’s Search
Chapter 4: Edith Wharton’s Case for Happiness and Society
Chapter 5: Hawthorne’s Hope for Friendship and Happiness
Chapter 6: Sharing the Pursuit of Happiness
In our pursuit of happiness, Americans often look first to secure our comfort, prosperity, and self-esteem. Elizabeth Amato uses some of the best writers that American literature has to offer to upend this notion. Through a keen reading of such novelists as Walker Percy, Tom Wolfe, and Edith Wharton, she reveals the truth that life’s challenges confound the pursuit of material happiness, and through them, offers a reminder that a more lasting and moderate happiness flows from ordered liberty and a concern for the truth and beauty of ordinary life.
— Brian A. Smith, Liberty Fund, Inc.
Elizabeth Amato has called a truce in the quarrel between philosophy and poetry. Drawing on 19th and 20th century novels she demonstrates how literature better prepares us for the pursuit of happiness. Amato’s reading of works by Tom Wolfe and Edith Wharton offer new insights into liberalism. The Pursuit of Happiness is an important contribution to the study of politics and literature.
— Natalie Taylor, Skidmore College
In an age dominated by self-help books promising to cure any number of problems, it seems that America’s on-going “pursuit of happiness” might be solved in just twelve easy steps. Exploring the science of contemporary happiness studies, Elizabeth Amato artfully suggests that a more nuanced way to think about the possibilities of happiness lies in the work of American novelists. Exploring the work of several writers, Amato convincingly shows how these authors address the myriad possibilities for happiness in ways that allow the reader to freely determine her own best course. Should such attempts come short, Amato’s prescription of returning to American novelists is a path to greater happiness in itself.
— Sara MacDonald
This book is an ideal resource for faculty in political science looking to develop undergraduate courses on American political thought, American novels and political theory, or in politics and literature more broadly. It is also valuable for the many insightful readings of important works of American literature it presents, and as a development of Zuckert’s case for the novel as a work of political theory. Most importantly, however, Amato’s American novelists allow for an exploration of the sources of human flourishing above, below, before, and, yes, after liberalism. . . . In an understated way, Amato makes the case for why if we care about our regimes and our happiness, we should get off social media and pick up a novel instead. Amato’s recommendations of these tales and the wild and vibrant pursuit of happiness in America are a happy corrective to our current prognostications about liberalism’s end.
— VoegelinView