In American political fantasy, the Founding Fathers loom large,
at once historical and mythical figures. In The Traumatic Colonel,
Michael J. Drexler and Ed White examine the Founders as imaginative
fictions, characters in the specifically literary sense, whose
significance emerged from narrative elements clustered around them.
From the revolutionary era through the 1790s, the Founders took
shape as a significant cultural system for thinking about politics,
race, and sexuality. Yet after 1800, amid the pressures of the
Louisiana Purchase and the Haitian Revolution, this system could no
longer accommodate the deep anxieties about the United States as a
slave nation.
Drexler and White assert that the most emblematic of the
political tensions of the time is the figure of Aaron Burr, whose
rise and fall were detailed in the literature of his time: his
electoral tie with Thomas Jefferson in 1800, the accusations of
seduction, the notorious duel with Alexander Hamilton, his
machinations as the schemer of a breakaway empire, and his
spectacular treason trial. The authors venture a
psychoanalytically-informed exploration of post-revolutionary
America to suggest that the figure of "Burr" was fundamentally a
displaced fantasy for addressing the Haitian Revolution. Drexler
and White expose how the historical and literary fictions of the
nation's founding served to repress the larger issue of the slave
system and uncover the Burr myth as the crux of that repression.
Exploring early American novels, such as the works of Charles
Brockden Brown and Tabitha Gilman Tenney, as well as the pamphlets,
polemics, tracts, and biographies of the early republican period,
the authors speculate that this flourishing of political writing
illuminates the notorious gap in U.S. literary history between 1800
and 1820.
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