This book is the first comprehensive study of antebellum depictions of the non-European world. Drawing on well-known works and archival discoveries, both artistic and textual, it proposes that U.S. cultural history cannot be fully understood unless we take into account how Americans regarded tropical America, the Holy Land, Polynesia, and Africa. The author first analyzes American geographical textbooks, arguing that through their hierarchical, racialized representations of the world s geobodies the American nation became embodied, was able to see itself on a global stage ushering the world into futurity. These textbooks did not just reflect normative, white bourgeois values; they produced those values daily in schools. Balancing psychological and cultural exegesis, the chapters that follow present case studies about U.S. travelers to non-European lands, in which the otherwise lofty geographic gaze became vexed by immersion in actual locales. A variety of issues and ideologies were thereby mediated, contested, or brought into focus: natural legalism (via Polynesia), the Protestant quest for scriptural luminosity (via the Holy Land), the fear of racial hybridity (via tropical America), and the question of African American agency (via Cuba and Africa).
Product Identifiers
Publisher
Stanford University Press
ISBN-13
9780804740463
eBay Product ID (ePID)
94486175
Product Key Features
Author
Bruce A. Harvey
Publication Name
American Geographics: U.S. National Narratives and the Representation of the Non-European World, 1830-1865
Format
Paperback
Language
English
Subject
History
Publication Year
2002
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
344 Pages
Dimensions
Item Height
229mm
Item Width
152mm
Item Weight
472g
Additional Product Features
Title_Author
Bruce A. Harvey
Country/Region of Manufacture
United States
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