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Never One Nation
Freaks, Savages, and Whiteness in U.S. Popular Culture, 1850–1877
Linda Frost
$20.00 Paper
ISBN: 0-8166-4490-X
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4490-2$60.00 Cloth
ISBN: 0-8166-4489-6
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-4489-6
Reviewing popular culture from newspaper headlines to sideshows, how American identity was forged through exclusion and stigmatization.
In Never One Nation, Linda Frost argues that during the eventful decades surrounding the Civil War, American identity was constructed not only nationally but also locally. Depictions of race, class, and sexuality seen in P. T. Barnum’s museums, in the image of the Circassian Beauty, and in popular periodicals like Harper’s Weekly, the Southern Illustrated News, and the San Francisco Golden Era further illustrated who was—and who was not—an American.
Local coverage of Native Americans and Chinese in the West, African Americans and recent Irish immigrants in New York, and slaves and Yankees in the South played a major role in conflating Americanness with whiteness. These ideas were shaped by reactions to events such as the 1863 Draft Riots and the Dakota uprising in Minnesota in 1862, and was laid bare through the demonization of Northern whites in Confederate newspapers and anxieties expressed in California newspapers about the possibility of Chinese immigrants gaining U.S. citizenship.
Through close readings of specific articles published in regional periodicals, mostly unexamined by literary scholars, Frost shows how Americanness came to be defined in the mid-nineteenth century by the mainstream popular culture. The era’s many social upheavals—Emancipation, Reconstruction, the start of the Indian wars in the West, immigration, and the completion of the transcontinental railroad—sharpened the desire of Americans to feel part of a national community, even as they made this search for an American identity extremely contentious and necessarily fragmented.
Never One Nation provocatively reframes the discourse on racial formation and reveals how local cultures and prejudices can recast the identity of a nation.
“Lively and wide-ranging study of racial caricature in nineteenth-century U.S. popular culture.” —Journal of American History
“The book is stunning.” —Journal of Southern History
“Never One Nation constitutes an important step toward a more contextualizd examination of the relationship between race and nation.”—Western Historical Quarterly
“Karen Frost’s Never One Nation belongs to this new generation. It is impressive for its focus on communities outside of New England and the Mid-Atlantic, its illustration of the dialogue between regional and national concerns, its use of lesser-known source material, and its sensitive mix of visual and literary texts.” —Journal of American Ethnic History
“A bold attempt to weave together a web of historical developments, it provocatively illustrates the challenges of nation building.” —Journal of Popular Culture
“I am impressed with the ambitious reach of Frost’s book. Her examination of popular explorations of race and gender as they express regional dynamics challenges each of us to consider how local interests, on the part of both readers and publishers, intersect with or work against larger, national and global investments.” —American Periodicals
“This book explores the central role that race has played in the construction of an American sense of identity. A captivating contribution to studies of race and ethnicity in the US. Highly recommended.” —Choice
“An endlessly fascinating book, noteworthy for its solid research and sophisticated reading of culture and history. Makes sense of popular discourses pivoting around questions of being and belonging in America during the third quarter of the nineteenth century. Never One Nation is an important work that should be read by students and scholars in history, literature, and ethnic studies.” —Material Culture
Linda Frost is associate professor of English at the University of Alabama, Birmingham.
272 pages | 23 halftones | 5 7⁄8 x 9 | 2005
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: Blinding Whiteness and "The Wonder of America"1. Roving Savages, Regionalized Americanness, and the 1862 Dakota Wars
2. Emancipation Anxiety and the New York City Draft Riots
3. The White Gaze, the Spectacle of Slavery, and the Circassian Beauty
4. A Peculiar Identity in the Confederate Southern Illustrated News
5. The Yankee, the Stump, and the Creation of a Confederate Imaginary
6. What the Railroad Brought: The "Heathen Chinee" and a Nation in the West
7. The Woman Question, Coast to CoastConclusion: Consumption, Community, and the Correspondence Column
Notes
Index