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The Grammar of Good Intentions - Race and the Antebellum Culture of Benevolence (Paperback, New edition)
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The Grammar of Good Intentions - Race and the Antebellum Culture of Benevolence (Paperback, New edition)
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Susan M. Ryan explores antebellum Americans' preoccupation with the
language and practice of benevolence. Drawing on a variety of
cultural and literary texts, she traces how people working and
writing within social reform movements and their outspoken
opponents helped solidify racial and class ideologies that
ultimately marginalized even the most "deserving" poor. "The links
between race and the relations of benevolence occasioned much
soul-searching among antebellum Americans," Ryan explains. "In a
period of heated public debate over issues such as slavery, Indian
removal, and non-Protestant immigration, the categories of
blackness, Indianness, and a generic 'foreignness' came to signify,
for many whites, need itself."Ryan puts familiar literary works
such as Herman Melville's The Confidence-Man, Frederick Douglass's
My Bondage and My Freedom, and Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's
Cabin back into dialogue with a broad range of print materials: the
reports of charity societies, African American and Native American
newspapers, juvenile fiction, travel writing, cartoons, sermons,
and tract literature. In the process, she dispels the myth that
authors usually classified as literary were responding to a simple
and unquestioned cult of benevolence. Rather, she contends, they
were participating in the complex and often rancorous debates
occurring within the broader culture over how good intentions
should be expressed and enacted.Ryan's inquiry into the antebellum
culture of benevolence has implications for contemporary U.S.
society, resonating especially with recent debates over welfare
reform, the politics of compassionate conservatism, and
representations of "welfare queens" and violent urban youth. As
Ryan writes, "The conversations that this book reconstructs remind
us of our ongoing participation in the national ritual of laying
claim to good intentions."
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