Inventing Destiny: Cultural Explorations of US Expansion

Inventing Destiny: Cultural Explorations of US Expansion

Inventing Destiny: Cultural Explorations of US Expansion

Inventing Destiny: Cultural Explorations of US Expansion

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Overview

The mythmakers of US expansion have expressed “manifest destiny” in many different ways—and so have its many discontents. A multidisciplinary study that delves into these contrasts and contradictions, Inventing Destiny offers a broad yet penetrating cultural history of nineteenth-century US territorial acquisition—a history that gives voice to the underrepresented actors who significantly complicated US narratives of empire, from Native Americans and Anglo-American women to anti- and non-national expansionists.

The contributors—established and emerging scholars from history, American studies, literary studies, art history, and religious studies—make use of source materials and techniques as various as artwork, religion, geospatial analysis, interior colonialism, and storytelling alongside fresh readings of traditional historical texts. In doing so, they seek to illuminate the complexities rather than simplify, to transgress borders rather than redraw them, and to amplify the under-told stories rather than repeat the old ones. Their work identifies and explores the obscure—or obscured—fictions of expansion, seeking a deeper understanding of the mechanisms of culture creation and recognizing those who resisted US territorial aggrandizement.

In sum, Inventing Destiny demonstrates the value of cross-disciplinary approaches to the study of the multiple rationales, critiques, interventions, and contingencies of nineteenth-century US expansion.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780700628193
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication date: 10/18/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 11 MB
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About the Author

Jimmy L. Bryan Jr. is associate professor of history at Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas. He is the author of, most recently, The American Elsewhere: Adventure and Manliness in the Age of Expansion, also from Kansas.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction. “Everybody Needs Some Elbow Room”: Culture and Contradiction in the Study of US Expansion, Jimmy L. Bryan Jr.

1. “A Destiny in the Womb of Time”: US Expansion and Its Prophets, Jimmy L. Bryan Jr.

2. Stealing Naboth’s Vinyard: The Religious Critique of Expansion, 1830–1855, Daniel J. Burge

3. The Art of Indian Affairs: Land and Sky in Charles Bird King’s Keokuk, the Watchful Fox, Kenneth Haltman

4. Expansion in the East: Seneca Sovereignty, Quaker Missionaries, and the Great Survey, 1797–1801, Elana Krischer

5. Armed Occupiers and Slaveholding Pioneers: Mapping White Settler Colonialism in Florida, Laurel Clark Shire

6. Geographies of Expansion: Nineteenth-Century Women’s Travel Writing, Susan L. Roberson

7. Revising Hannah Duston: Domesticity and the Frontier in Nineteenth-Century Retellings of the Duston Captivity, Chad A. Barbour

8. Autobiography across Borders: Reading John Dunn Hunter’s Memoirs of a Captivity among the Indians of North America from Childhood to the Age of Nineteen, Andy Doolen

9. The Lansford Hastings Imaginary: Visions of Democratic Patriarchy in the Americas, 1842–1867, Thomas Richards Jr.

10. Safely “Beyond the Limits of the United States”: The Mormon Expulsion and US Expansion, Gerrit Dirkmaat

11. At the Center of Southern Empire: The Role of Gulf South Communities in Antebellum Territorial Expansion, Maria Angela Diaz

12. Inventing a National Past: Archaeological Investigation in the Southwest in the Aftermath of the US-Mexican War, 1851–1879, Matthew N. Johnston

Contributors

Index

A photo gallery follows page 130

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