<div><i>Mobility and Modernity: Panama in the Nineteenth-Century Anglo-American Imagination</i>&nbsp;rewrites the history of the Panama Canal&nbsp;assessing for the first time the literary culture of the preceding&nbsp;decades. In this period U.S. and British writers and visual artists developed sophisticated languages of mobility time and speed to cast the isthmus as an in-between place a point of connection to more important destinations.&nbsp; These discourses served an important role in their own day and laid the imaginative ground for the canal to come.<br> &nbsp;<br> &nbsp;<br> In this study Robert D. Aguirre provides bold new interpretations of Anthony Trollope John Lloyd Stephens and Eadweard Muybridge and also recovers information about literary communities previously lost to history.&nbsp;<i>Mobility and Modernity</i>&nbsp;shows how Panama became defined as a site of incipient globalization and a crucial link of empire. Across this narrow strip of land people and things traveled technology developed and political forces erupted. The isthmus became a site of mobility that paradoxically produced varieties of immobility. Parting ways with histories that celebrate the canal as a mighty engineering feat&nbsp;<i>Mobility and Modernity</i>&nbsp;reveals a more complex story of cultural conflict that began with the first gold rush news in the late 1840s and continued throughout the century.<br> &nbsp;</div>
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