Robert Abrams argues that new concepts of space and landscape emerged in mid-nineteenth-century American writing marking a linguistic and interpretative limit to American expansion. Abrams supports the radical elements of antebellum writing where writers from Hawthorne to Rebecca Harding Davis disputed the naturalizing discourses of mid-nineteenth century society. Whereas previous critics find in antebellum writing a desire to convert chaos into an affirmative liberal agenda Abrams contends that authors of the 1840s and 50s deconstructed more than they constructed.
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