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Material Type: | Government publication, State or province government publication |
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Document Type: | Book |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Jimmy L Bryan |
ISBN: | 9780700628179 0700628177 9780700628186 0700628185 9780700628193 0700628193 |
OCLC Number: | 1089261242 |
Description: | x, 289 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 23 cm |
Contents: | Introduction: "everybody needs some elbow room": culture and contradiction in the study of US expansion / Jimmy L. Bryan Jr -- "A destiny in the womb of time": US expansion and its prophets / Jimmy L. Bryan Jr -- Stealing Naboth's Vineyard: the religious critique of expansion, 1830-1855 / Daniel J. Burge -- The art of Indian affairs: land and sky in Charles Bird King's Keokuk, the watchful fox / Kenneth Haltman -- Expansion in the East: Seneca sovereignty, Quaker missionaries, and the great survey, 1797-1801 / Elana Krischer -- Armed occupiers and slaveholding pioneers: mapping white settler colonialism in Florida / Laurel Clark Shire -- Geographies of expansion: nineteenth-century women's travel writing / Susan L. Roberson -- Revising Hannah Duston: domesticity and the frontier in nineteenth-century retellings of the Duston captivity / Chad A. Barbour -- Autobiography across borders: reading John Dunn Hunter's Memoirs of a captivity among the Indians of North America, from childhood to the age nineteen / Andy Doolen -- The Lansford Hastings imaginary: visions of democratic patriarchy in the Americas, 1842-1867 / Thomas Richards Jr -- Safely "beyond the limits of the United States": the Mormon expulsion and US expansion / Gerrit Dirkmaat -- At the center of Southern empire: the role of Gulf South communities in Antebellum territorial expansion / Maria Angela Diaz -- Inventing a national past: archaeological investigation in the Southwest in the aftermath of the US-Mexican war, 1851-1879 / Matthew Johnston. |
Responsibility: | edited by Jimmy L. Bryan Jr. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
In the most important rethinking of US imperialism and expansionism since Amy Kaplan and Donald Pease's Cultures of United States Imperialism in 1993, Inventing Destiny: Cultural Explanations of US Expansion provides a complex, multi-faceted, multi-dimensional reconsideration of Manifest Destiny. Moving readers beyond the simplistic narrative of expansionism, the essays in this collection challenge the notion that there is anything simple about Manifest Destiny or American imperialism. Instead, they compellingly demonstrate that seemingly simple rhetorical devices like Manifest Destiny emerge from a complicated network of cultural contexts and represent competing agendas, ideals, and goals." - Gregory Eiselein, Professor and University Distinguished Teaching Scholar Department of English, Kansas State University"Readers hoping to learn more about the culture of US expansion need look no further than this compelling interdisciplinary collection. The essays in Inventing Destiny offer fresh perspectives on the contested nature of territorial conquests across the North American continent." - Amy S. Greenberg, author of A Wicked War: Polk, Clay, Lincoln, and the 1846 U.S. Invasion of Mexico"Taking a creative, multidisciplinary approach to the study of American westward expansion, Inventing Destiny challenges scholars to think about the cultural driving forces-including art, literature, gender, and religion-behind the rapid transformation of the nation's nineteenth-century frontier." - William S. Kiser, author of Coast-to-Coast Empire: Manifest Destiny and the New Mexico Borderlands "These eclectic, indeed kaleidoscopic, essays take the story of America's territorial growth from the Early Republic to the Gilded Age in fresh directions. They reveal we can learn as much about the impulses and limits of US expansion from capsule biographies and microscopic and interdisciplinary analyses of obscure texts, maps, artistic renderings and incidents, as we can learn from the machinations of political leaders and diplomats and the victories and Setbacks of national armies. Editor Jimmy Bryan and his fellow authors collectively provide a fascinating cultural take not only on the saga of America's "Manifest Destiny" on its western and southern borderlands, but also on the particular roles of women and marginalized peoples-especially Native Americans, African Americans, and Mormons-within that process. This volume should appeal to anyone tempted to delve beyond commonplace narratives of nineteenth-century America's thrust westward and southward." - Robert E. May, author of Slavery, Race, and Conquest in the Tropics: Lincoln, Douglas, and the Future of Latin America"The disciplinary range on display in these essays is impressive, and the collection shows that while manifest destiny was an expression of domination, no one group dominated the creation of the discourse. The book makes a significance contribution to our understanding of the American West and the American nation." - Jon T. Coleman, author of Vicious: Wolves and Men in America Read more...

