America's England - Christopher Hanlon

America's England

Antebellum Literature and Atlantic Sectionalism
Buch | Softcover
258 Seiten
2016
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-049445-2 (ISBN)
47,35 inkl. MwSt
America's England examines the maneuvers through which U.S. partisans encoded the turmoil of antebellum America in terms of English affiliation. Demonstrating that English genealogies, geographies, and economics encoded the sectional crisis for Southern and Northern Americans, it locates sectionalism in a broader Atlantic context of cultural imagination and literary production.
The wealth of transatlantic scholarship to emerge in recent years has greatly enriched our understanding of the mutual, far-reaching cultural exchange between Great Britain and the United States. Yet scholars often lose sight of this relationship in the years immediately leading up to the outbreak of the Civil War. Drawing on a capacious array of travel narratives, novels, poems, political scuffles, and more, Christopher Hanlon's innovative study examines the patterns of affiliation through which U.S. culture encoded the turmoil of antebellum America in terms of imagined connections with England.

Through engagement with contemporaneous renditions of English race, history, landscape aesthetics, telecommunications, and economic discourse, America's England reveals how Northern and Southern partisans re-imagined the terms behind their antagonisms, forming a transatlantic surround for the otherwise cisatlantic political struggles that would dissolve the Union in 1861. Among other ramifications, the re-conceptualization of sectional issues in transatlantic terms undermined the notion that white citizens of the United States formed a unified biological or cultural community, effectively polarizing the imagined ethnic and cultural bases of the American polity. But beyond that, a continued reference to English historical, cultural, and political formations allowed figures such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Frederick Douglass, Henry Timrod, Lydia Maria Child, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Sumner, and others to situate an era of developing national acrimony along longer historical and transnational curves, forming accounts of national crisis that situated questions of a domestic political bearing at oceanic removes from Northern and Southern combatants.

Demonstrating that English genealogies, geographies, and economics shaped the sectional crisis for antebellum Americans on both sides of the Mason-Dixon, America's England locates the key crisis points of the period in a broader transatlantic constellation that provided distinctive circumstances for literary production.

Christopher Hanlon is Associate Professor of English at Arizona State University.

Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: Transatlantic Bloodlines and English Traits
Chapter 2: Feeling Free in Medieval America
Chapter 3: Picturing America
Chapter 4: John Pendleton Kennedy's Plantation of the Picturesque
Chapter 5: Embodied Eloquence, the Sumner Assault, and the Transatlantic Cable
Chapter 6: Henry Timrod's Global Confederacy
Coda

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Oxford Studies in American Literary History
Zusatzinfo 15 illus.
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 158 x 234 mm
Gewicht 396 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Neuzeit (bis 1918)
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturgeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
Sozialwissenschaften
ISBN-10 0-19-049445-X / 019049445X
ISBN-13 978-0-19-049445-2 / 9780190494452
Zustand Neuware
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
Europa 1848/49 und der Kampf für eine neue Welt

von Christopher Clark

Buch | Hardcover (2023)
DVA (Verlag)
48,00