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Unbecoming British - How Revolutionary America Became a Postcolonial Nation (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,370
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Unbecoming British - How Revolutionary America Became a Postcolonial Nation (Hardcover)
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What can textiles, teapots, quince jam-and a moose carcass that
Thomas Jefferson had shipped to France-reveal about the formation
of early US national identity? In this wide-ranging and original
study, Kariann Yokota combines a rigorous examination of material
objects with insights from postcolonial theory to propose a bold
new interpretation of American history. Although independence from
Britain entailed certain freedoms, it also fueled, among the
Founding Fathers and other post-colonial creole elites, anxieties
about cultural inferiority and race. Caught between their desire to
emulate "civilizedEurope and an awareness that they lived at the
periphery of the civilized world, they went to great lengths to
convince themselves and others of their refinement. And yet they
had to rely on Britain and China to supply their patriotic
tableware, European cartographers who had never set foot in the
Americas for their maps, and industrial spies to help establish
American manufactures. In the eyes of contemporary diarists,
travelers, scientists, and collectors, both American and European,
the post-revolutionary elite exhibited a certain backwardness and
gullibility: why else would they purchase out-of-fashion silk or
pay for shipments of broken housewares? But what really
distinguished the new nation, according to these observers, were
its unlimited natural resources, the widespread presence of
slavery, and non-white societies alternately viewed as "savageand
"noble. Yokota examines a wealth of evidence from the fields of
geography, decorative arts, intellectual history and technology to
suggest that the process of Unbecoming British was not an easy one.
Far from having its footing or its future secure, the new nation
struggled to define itself economically, politically and culturally
in the years between the first and the second American revolution,
the War of 1812. Out of this confusion of hope and exploitation,
insecurity and vision, emerged a uniquely American national
identity.
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