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Cover of Immigration, Ethnicity, and Class in American Writing, 1830-1860

Immigration, Ethnicity, and Class in American Writing, 1830-1860

Reading the Stranger

By Leonardo Buonomo

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Publish Date

2015

Publisher

Fairleigh Dickinson University Press

Language

eng

Pages

212

Description:

This book examines the close relationship between the portrayal of foreigners and the delineation of culture and identity in antebellum American writing. Both literary and historical in its approach, this study shows how, in a period marked by extensive immigration, heated debates on national and racial traits, during a flowering in American letters, encouraged responses from American authors to outsiders that not only contain precious insights into nineteenth-century America’s self-construction but also serve to illuminate our own time’s multicultural societies. The authors under consideration are alternately canonical (Emerson, Hawthorne, Melville), recently rediscovered (Kirkland), or simply neglected (Arthur). The texts analyzed cover such different genres as diaries, letters, newspapers, manuals, novels, stories, and poems.