The ethics of identity: Constructions of self and other in the nineteenth century American landscape.
When the Puritan fathers sailed to the new world, they did so, in the language of Martin Buber, to build a new house in the cosmos, one grounded in a rigorous notion of faith and Christian virtue. The journey to America was represented as both a mythic and heroic quest--one rooted in an ideology of...
Main Author: | Bolton, Linda. |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Sherry, Charles |
Language: | en |
Published: |
The University of Arizona.
1994
|
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10150/186935 |
Similar Items
-
Constructions of identity in nineteenth-century Scottish and American fiction : ideology and discourse
by: Hughes, Keith John
Published: (1998) -
Meaningful Places: Landscape Photographers in the Nineteenth-Century American West
by: Emily L. Voelker
Published: (2015-11-01) -
Transcendentalist Aesthetics in Emerson, Peirce, and Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Painting
by: Guardiano, Nicholas
Published: (2014) -
The Visual Creation of the State Apparatus, Nineteenth Century American Landscape Paintings
by: Hacker, Jonathan Joseph
Published: (2019) -
The Other Witness: Nineteenth-Century American Protestantism and the Material Gospel Theology
by: Adler, Jennifer Axsom
Published: (2015)