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What did politics and public affairs mean to those generations
of Americans who first experienced democratic self-rule? Taking
their cue from vibrant political campaigns and very high voter
turnouts, historians have depicted the nineteenth century as an era
of intense and widespread political enthusiasm. But rarely have
these historians examined popular political engagement directly, or
within the broader contexts of day-to-day life. In this bold and
in-depth look at Americans and their politics, Glenn Altschuler and
Stuart Blumin argue for a more complex understanding of the "space"
occupied by politics in nineteenth-century American society and
culture. Mining such sources as diaries, letters, autobiographies,
novels, cartoons, contested-election voter testimony to state
legislative committees, and the partisan newspapers of
representative American communities ranging from Massachusetts and
Georgia to Texas and California, the authors explore a wide range
of political actions and attitudes. They consider the enthusiastic
commitment celebrated by historians together with various forms of
skepticism, conflicted engagement, detachment, and hostility that
rarely have been recognized as part of the American political
landscape. Rude Republic sets the political parties and their noisy
and attractive campaign spectacles, as well as the massive turnout
of voters on election day, within the communal social structure and
calendar, the local human landscape of farms, roads, and county
towns, and the organizational capacities of emerging
nineteenth-century institutions. Political action and engagement
are set, too, within the tide of events: the construction of the
mass-based party system, the gathering crisis over slavery and
disunion, and the gradual expansion of government (and of cities)
in the post-Civil War era. By placing the question of popular
engagement within these broader social, cultural, and historical
contexts, the authors bring new understanding to the complex
trajectory of American democracy.
First published in 1850, "New York by Gas-Light" explores the seamy
side of the newly emerging metropolis: "the festivities of
prostitution, the orgies of pauperism, the haunts of theft and
murder, the scenes of drunkenness and beastly debauch, and all the
sad realities that go to make up the lower stratum--the underground
story--of life in New York!" The author of this lively and
fascinating little book, which both attracted and offended large
numbers of readers in Victorian America, was George G. Foster,
reporter for Horace Greeley's influential "New York Tribune,"
social commentator, poet, and man about town. Foster drew on his
daily and nightly rambles through the city's streets and among the
characters of the urban "demi-monde" to produce a sensationalized
but extraordinarily revealing portrait of New York at the moment it
was emerging as a major metropolis. Reprinted here with sketches
from two of Foster's other books, "New York by Gas-Light" will be
welcomed by students of urban social history, popular culture,
literature, and journalism.
Editor Stuart M. Blumin has provided a penetrating introductory
essay that sets Foster's life and work in the contexts of the
growing city, the development of the mass-distribution publishing
industry, the evolving literary genre of urban sensationalism, and
the wider culture of Victorian America. This is an important
reintroduction to a significant but neglected work, a prologue to
the urban realism that would flourish later in the fiction of
Stephen Crane, the painting of George Bellows, and the journalism
of Jacob Riis.
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