Wendy Raphael Roberts is Assistant Professor of English at The University at Albany, SUNY.
Wendy Roberts provides a masterful account of the ways in which poetry enabled new experiences of charismatic religion in the eighteenth-century Atlantic world. Like the poems it expertly examines, Awakening Verse will delight and instruct both general readers and specialists in the histories of religion and poetics. The book is deeply researched and carefully argued, and yet still open to exploring the unexpected detours its subjects take. * Michael C. Cohen, UCLA * Awakening Verse is a powerful new take on evangelicalism and poetry in eighteenth-century British North America. With a dazzling archive and rigorous analysis, Roberts uses the significant but hitherto unexamined genre of revivalist verse to reveal the inextricable links between religious affections and poetic form. Nobody will be able to look at Ralph Waldo Emerson's vision of poetry replacing religion in the same way again. * Sarah Rivett, Princeton University * In Awakening Verse, Wendy Raphael Roberts recovers a substantial archive of American evangelical poetry and brilliantly interprets the assumptions that shaped it. These poems were understood to be expressions of the language of heaven, born of a belief in poetry's redemptive power. Few works of literary history have the potential to fundamentally alter critical narratives. Roberts's book is one such rare and important work. * Sandra M. Gustafson, Author of Eloquence is Power and Imagining Deliberative Democracy in the Early American Republic * Awakening Verse boldly and convincingly demonstrates the cultural potency of Evangelical poetry in the Eighteenth-century Atlantic World. Its historiography jettisons national narratives, framing matters within a story of transatlantic Reformed Christianity. It does not sublate its religious history into an account of the rise of American civil religion or British social gospel. It argues that Evangelical poetry supplied greater range of expression than homiletics or hymnody because it was voiced by more women, Natives, and Africans. Finally, it reveals Evangelic verse's figural signature-espousal-differentiating its poetics from Augustan neoclassicism. A new classic of Anglo-American literary history. * David S. Shields, University of South Carolina *