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Mapping Region in Early American Writing is a collection of essays
that study how early American writers thought about the spaces
around them. The contributors reconsider the various roles
regions-imagined politically, economically, racially, and
figuratively-played in the formation of American communities, both
real and imagined. These texts vary widely: some are canonical,
others archival; some literary, others scientific; some polemical,
others simply documentary. As a whole, they recreate important
mental mappings and cartographies, and they reveal how diverse
populations imagined themselves, their communities, and their
nation as occupying the American landscape. Focusing on
place-specific, local writing published before 1860, Mapping Region
in Early American Writing examines a period often overlooked in
studies of regional literature in America. More than simply
offering a prehistory of regionalist writing, these essays offer
new ways of theorizing and studying regional spaces in the United
States as it grew from a union of disparate colonies along the
eastern seaboard into an industrialized nation on the verge of
overseas empire building. They also seek to amplify lost voices of
diverse narratives from minority, frontier, and outsider groups
alongside their more well-known counterparts in a time when
America's landscapes and communities were constant.
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