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Christopher E. G. Benfey

    Christopher Benfey is a distinguished scholar whose work delves into the rich intersections of art, literature, and the natural world. He explores how these elements shape our perception and understanding of culture and history. Benfey's prose is celebrated for its lyrical quality and profound insights, offering readers a unique perspective on enduring themes.

    The Double Life of Stephen Crane
    The Great Wave
    • The Great Wave

      Gilded Age Misfits, Japanese Eccentrics, and the Opening of Old Japan

      • 332 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      When the United States entered the Gilded Age after the Civil War the nation lost its philosophical moorings and looked eastward to "Old Japan," with its seemingly untouched indigenous culture, for balance and perspective. Japan, meanwhile, was trying to reinvent itself as a more cosmopolitan, modern state, ultimately transforming itself, in the course of twenty-five years, from a feudal backwater to an international power. This great wave of historical and cultural reciprocity between the two young nations, which intensified during the late 1800s, brought with it some larger-than-life personalities, as the lure of unknown foreign cultures prompted pilgrimages back and forth across the Pacific. In The great wave, Benfey tells the story of the tightly knit group of nineteenth-century travelers--connoisseurs, collectors, and scientists--who dedicated themselves to exploring and preserving Old Japan. These travelers include Herman Melville, Henry Adams, John La Farge, Lafcadio Hearn, Mabel Loomis Todd, Edward Sylvester Morse, Percival Lowell, and President Theodore Roosevelt. As well, we learn of famous Easterners come West, including Kakuzo Okakura and Shuzo Kuki.

      The Great Wave
      3.8
    • The Double Life of Stephen Crane

      • 320 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      This is the first reassessment of Stephen Crane in more than a quarter of a century. The novelist-journalist born in 1871, six years after the war he memorialized in his universally acclaimed 'The Red Badge of Courage', died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-eight.

      The Double Life of Stephen Crane