<p>"What then is the American, this new man?" This question is explored here through the lives and writings of a sequence of imaginative authors each of whom confronted a crucial moment in the evolution of the new nation (from Crevecoeur and the Revolution, through Washington Irving and Jeffersonian Democracy, to James Fenimore Cooper and the Era of Good Feelings). At the centre of these confrontations was a division between those who claimed national perfection had been obtained, and those who, while desperately wanting to believe this, perceived all too clearly that that perfection had not yet come. Rediscovering this neglected literary debate, <em>The Literary Quest for an American National Character</em> illuminates afresh the traumatic birth and development of the new American nation.</p> <p>Introduction</p><p>1 – A Farmer asks a Question and a Scientist creates a Model (c.1760-1776)</p><p>2 – Hugh Henry Brackenridge and the Dogma of Balance</p><p>3 – The Defining Moment: Washington Irving and A History of New York</p><p>4 – The Fragments: Minor Writers (c.1810-1824)</p><p>5 – The Illusion Ascendant: James Fenimore Cooper and the Art of Reconciliation</p><p>Conclusion: A Nice Derangement of Epitaphs</p><p>Notes</p><p>Bibliography</p><p>Index</p>
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