Warring for America: Cultural Contests in the Era of 1812

Warring for America: Cultural Contests in the Era of 1812

Warring for America: Cultural Contests in the Era of 1812

Warring for America: Cultural Contests in the Era of 1812

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Overview

The War of 1812 was one of a cluster of events that left unsettled what is often referred to as the Revolutionary settlement. At once postcolonial and neoimperial, the America of 1812 was still in need of definition. As the imminence of war intensified the political, economic, and social tensions endemic to the new nation, Americans of all kinds fought for country on the battleground of culture. The War of 1812 increased interest in the American democratic project and elicited calls for national unity, yet the essays collected in this volume suggest that the United States did not emerge from war in 1815 having resolved the Revolution's fundamental challenges or achieved a stable national identity. The cultural rifts of the early republican period remained vast and unbridged.

Contributors:
Brian Connolly, University of South Florida
Anna Mae Duane, University of Connecticut
Duncan Faherty, Queens College, CUNY
James M. Greene, Pittsburg State University
Matthew Rainbow Hale, Goucher College
Jonathan Hancock, Hendrix College
Tim Lanzendoerfer, University of Mainz
Karen Marrero, Wayne State University
Nathaniel Millett, St. Louis University
Christen Mucher, Smith College
Dawn Peterson, Emory University
Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, University of Michigan
David Waldstreicher, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Eric Wertheimer, Arizona State University

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469631516
Publisher: Omohundro Institute and UNC Press
Publication date: 09/25/2017
Series: Published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and the University of North Carolina Press
Pages: 512
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Nicole Eustace is a professor of history at New York University.

Fredrika J. Teute is retired editor of publications at the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Reminding us that any fight for America is a fight over America, this rich collection surveys the rugged terrain of the hard-fought culture wars surrounding the War of 1812. With its depiction of a United States as riven by class and race as much as united against foreign threat, this volume could not be more timely.—Jeannine DeLombard, University of California, Santa Barbara



Did the Jeffersonian-Madisonian Republic establish a post-Revolutionary consensus that would unravel with the rise of antebellum sectionalism? The sparkling essays in Warring for America reveal a very different set of stories. Americans were struggling to define their nation, with fragile common formations barely concealing underlying fractures. This volume offers a window onto the most innovative work on the cultural history of the early Republic in the age of Atlantic empire.—John L. Brooke, Ohio State University



Warring for America opens up new pathways for scholarship and thought on the early republic. Provocative, deeply engaged, and wide ranging, this set of essays reveals that, in literature, political rhetoric, theater, and art, the very idea of the republic was imagined and reimagined in the years surrounding the War of 1812.—Michael Meranze, University of California, Los Angeles

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