Description
About the Author
Nolan Bennett is an Assistant Professor of Democracy and Justice Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay. He is a scholar of American political thought, and his research considers why and to what effect historical actors and movements ground their claims for democratic justice in personal experience. He recovers genres like autobiography, slave narrative, and prison writing as appeals to popular authority and representation not found in state or electoral politics. Nolan is particularly interested in issues of prison reform and punishment in the United States, inspired by the long history of prison writing, and with a committed interest to teaching in carceral spaces.
Reviews
Bennett's book is a successful and compelling call to expand the genres which we, as practitioners of political theory, direct scholarly attention to and from which we theorize. He convincingly demonstrates that autobiography, and the claims of experience it imparts have much to offer to political theory. * Veronica Zebadua-Yanez, University of Virginia, Contemporary Political Theory *
...There is no doubt that his is a fresh voice in the field of political theory....Recommended. * M.J. Birkner, Gettysburg College, CHOICE *
The reflections that The Claims of Experience inspires are vital to pursue now, and they will be for as long as American democracy, in one form or another, endures. * Rogers Smith, Review of Politics *
[A]n original, beautifully written, and sophisticated account of how autobiography represents a distinct genre of political theory that holds the power to recreate political community through personal life writing. * Adam Dahl, Political Theory *
Autobiography is central to galvanizing democratic action, Nolan Bennett argues in this important and timely book. Life writing allows authors to seize the authority to make their lives politically meaningful, while encouraging readers to connect their own experiences to visions of equality and justice. Engaging some of the most interesting writers in American political history, this beautiful book reminds us of the power of personal storytelling for crafting vibrant democratic futures. * Elisabeth R. Anker, author of Orgies of Feeling: Melodrama and the Politics of Freedom *
The Claims of Experience is a beautiful, innovative book. Through vivid studies of autobiographies by revered and reviled figures from US history, Nolan Bennett captures the relationship between life writing and democratic thinking. Bennett's book not only reveals the political value of autobiography, but it also pursues Richard Wright's dream of building 'a bridge of words' between the stories of five remarkable lives and the possibilities for freer and more humane forms of coexistence. * Lawrie Balfour, author of Democracy's Reconstruction: Thinking Politically with W. E. B. Du Bois *
Nolan Bennett's fine study adds a vitally important dimension to our understanding of autobiography and its uses. Heretofore, we have approached this genre mainly for insights into personal identity and for vivid testimony about trauma, illness, and disability. Bennett now shows that autobiographies are also compelling contributions to an expanded political theory of democracy, one that gives weight to experience not just ideas, and to citizens not just institutions. * Nick Bromell, author of The Time Is Always Now: Black Thought and the Transformation of US Democracy *
Nolan Bennett's Claims of Experience is an ambitious and thought-provoking book that introduces creative new ways to think about the role of autobiography in democratic politics. Analyzing how a diverse selection of American thinkers have told their life stories, it offers strikingly original interpretations of their political thought, along with fresh insights into their personal and public lives. It is a book for anyone who cares about how Americans understand themselves and their politics, not only in the past but also today. * Michael Lienesch, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill *
Nolan Bennett's The Claims of Experience is a remarkable book. Bennett recovers the role of personal narrative as a resource for political thought and democratic politics in a series of provocative and original readings of autobiographical texts. It offers keen insights in an engaging prose. This is an important and original contribution to political theory. * Simon Stow, The College of William and Mary *
Autobiography creates community. This is the bold, paradoxical claim that Nolan Bennett explores in this magnificent history of life writing in U.S. political thought. Bennett sheds new light on classic autobiographers, Benjamin Franklin and Frederick Douglass, while disclosing the intellectual riches of the relatively neglected Henry Adams, Emma Goldman, and Whittaker Chambers. This careful, thorough book will have a long shelf life as an alternative history of American political thought. * Jack Turner, author of Awakening to Race: Individualism and Social Consciousness in America *
Bennett shows us that, throughout American history, Americans have found a creative way to challenge and expand the 'we' [of 'We the People']...they have done so through autobiography."-Susan McWilliams Barndt, Perspectives on Politics
Book Information
ISBN 9780197588246
Author Nolan Bennett
Format Paperback
Page Count 280
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 454g
Dimensions(mm) 155mm * 236mm * 18mm