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Adopting America - Childhood, Kinship, and National Identity in Literature (Hardcover)
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Adopting America - Childhood, Kinship, and National Identity in Literature (Hardcover)
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American literature abounds with orphans who experience adoption or
placements that resemble adoption. These narratives do more than
describe adventures of children living away from home. They tell an
American story of family and national identity. In literature from
the seventeenth to the early twentieth century, adoption functions
as narrative event and trope to recount the American migratory
experience, the impact of Calvinist faith, and the growth of
democratic individualism.
The literary roots of adoption appear in the discourse of Puritan
settlers, who ambivalently took leave of their birth country and
portrayed themselves as abandoned offspring. Believing they were
chosen children of God, they also prayed for spiritual adoption and
emulated God's grace by extending adoption to others.
Nineteenth-century literature develops from this idea of adoption
as salvation and from simultaneous attachments to the Old World and
New. In fiction of the mid-nineteenth century, adoption also
reflects the importance of nurture in childrearing and the nation's
increased mobility. Middle-class concerns over immigration and
urbanization appear in the form of orphancy and are addressed
through adoption. For some, adoption signals a fresh start and the
opportunity for success without genealogical constraints. Other
times, particularly for girls and children of color, it suggests
dependence, reflecting contemporary gender and racial biases.
A complex signifier of difference, adoption gives voice to
concurrent and sometimes contradictory calls to origins and new
beginnings; to feelings of worthiness and unworthiness. In writings
from John Winthrop and Cotton Mather to Nathaniel Hawthorne, Louisa
May Alcott, and Edith Wharton, Carol Singley reveals how adoption
both replicates and challenges genealogical norms, evoking
ambivalence and playing a foundational role in the shaping of many
of our most dearly held national mythologies.
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