presents nine essays that reread major British, American, and European nineteenth-century literary texts in light of the post-deconstruction ethical philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas. The first section pursues, in essays on Wordsworth, Coleridge, De Quincey, and Baudelaire, connections between Levinas's radical rethinking of subjectivity and Romantic generic, aesthetic, and conceptual innovation. The second section explores how Levinas's analysis of totalizing thought may illuminate how Poe, Emerson, Hawthorne, Douglass, Susan Warner, and Melville grapple with American experience and culture. The third considers the relevance of Levinas's work for reassessments of the realist novel through essays on Austen, Dickens, and George Eliot.