“A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815

This article argues that the emergence of American cultural nationalism after the War of 1812 developed in self-confident opposition to the Old World, yet was thoroughly influenced by European standards of nationhood. American intellectuals who campaigned for cultural independence from Europe at the...

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Main Author: Jaap Verheul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2012-04-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/9638
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spelling doaj-55f04dd10677454ca2ee843bfb768a852020-11-25T02:18:42ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362012-04-017210.4000/ejas.9638“A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815Jaap VerheulThis article argues that the emergence of American cultural nationalism after the War of 1812 developed in self-confident opposition to the Old World, yet was thoroughly influenced by European standards of nationhood. American intellectuals who campaigned for cultural independence from Europe at the same time retained European standards of civilization and esthetics, and were thoroughly influenced by ideas about the relationship between culture and nation that developed in England and Germany. This articles discusses these postcolonial complexities are reflected in debates about American cultural identity in newly founded magazines such as the North American Review that long predated Emerson’s famous “Intellectual Declaration of Independence” of 1837.http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/9638aesthetic theoryAnglophiliaassociationismBerlinConnecticut WitsConstitutional Convention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jaap Verheul
spellingShingle Jaap Verheul
“A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815
European Journal of American Studies
aesthetic theory
Anglophilia
associationism
Berlin
Connecticut Wits
Constitutional Convention
author_facet Jaap Verheul
author_sort Jaap Verheul
title “A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815
title_short “A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815
title_full “A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815
title_fullStr “A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815
title_full_unstemmed “A Peculiar National Character”: Transatlantic Realignment and the Birth of American Cultural Nationalism after 1815
title_sort “a peculiar national character”: transatlantic realignment and the birth of american cultural nationalism after 1815
publisher European Association for American Studies
series European Journal of American Studies
issn 1991-9336
publishDate 2012-04-01
description This article argues that the emergence of American cultural nationalism after the War of 1812 developed in self-confident opposition to the Old World, yet was thoroughly influenced by European standards of nationhood. American intellectuals who campaigned for cultural independence from Europe at the same time retained European standards of civilization and esthetics, and were thoroughly influenced by ideas about the relationship between culture and nation that developed in England and Germany. This articles discusses these postcolonial complexities are reflected in debates about American cultural identity in newly founded magazines such as the North American Review that long predated Emerson’s famous “Intellectual Declaration of Independence” of 1837.
topic aesthetic theory
Anglophilia
associationism
Berlin
Connecticut Wits
Constitutional Convention
url http://journals.openedition.org/ejas/9638
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