"This volume joins a growing body of scholarship that rejects the traditional word/image binary . . . A strength of this book is Jarenski’s archival research, which enriches her readings of the works discussed and allows her to offer fresh perspectives on well-known writers. Recommended."
—CHOICE
“Immersive Words continues a line of argument about visual culture that has invigorated the study of nineteenth-century American literature, but it also forges new, interdisciplinary relations between literary studies and the burgeoning field of American studies. While its central texts are by nineteenth-century authors such as Melville, Douglass, and Hawthorne, Jarenski enriches her analysis with many other ancillary cultural texts, events, and subgenres that open the book up to other periods and forms of cultural production, ultimately making Immersive Words much more than the sum of its parts.”
—Michael A. Chaney, author of Fugitive Vision: Slave Image and Black Identity in Antebellum Narrative and editor of Graphic Subjects: Critical Essays on Autobiography and Graphic Novels
“Immersive Words is a significant contribution to nineteenth-century American literary studies and to our understanding of visual culture of the era in its various manifestations. It provides numerous insights into the intersection of visual technologies and commodities with literary works, helping us to gain a better appreciation and sense of how the literary aesthetic achievements of authors such as Melville, Douglass, Hawthorne, and Jewett emerged from their engagement with and reworking of the aesthetic experience of daguerreotypes, panoramas, travel literature, and museum exhibits.”--Paul Gilmore, author of The Genuine Article: Race, Mass Culture, and American Literary Manhood and Aesthetic Materialism: Electricity and American Romanticism