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Twice-Divided Nation - National Memory, Transatlantic News, and American Literature in the Civil War Era (Paperback)
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Twice-Divided Nation - National Memory, Transatlantic News, and American Literature in the Civil War Era (Paperback)
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The first thoroughly interdisciplinary study to examine how
thetransatlantic relationship between the United States and Britain
helped shape the conflicts between North and South in the decade
before the American Civil War, Twice-Divided Nation addresses that
influence primarily as a problem of national memory. Samuel Graber
argues that the nation was twice divided: first, by the
sectionalism that resulted from disagreements concerning slavery;
and second, by Unionists' increasing sense of alienation from
British definitions of nationalism. The key factor in these
diverging national concepts of memory was the emergence of a
fiercely independent press in the U.S. and its connections to
Britain and British news. Failing to recognize this shifting
transatlantic dynamic during the Civil War era, scholars have
overlooked the degree to which the conflict between the Union and
the Confederacy was regarded at home and abroad as a referendum not
merely on Lincoln's election or the Constitution or even slavery,
but on the nationalist claim to an independent past. Graber shows
how this movement toward cultural independence was reflected in a
distinctively American literature, manifested in the writings of
such diverse figures as journalist Horace Greeley and poet Walt
Whitman.
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