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E-raamat: Men of Letters in the Early Republic: Cultivating Forums of Citizenship

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" In the aftermath of the Revolutionary War, after decades of intense upheaval and debate, the role of the citizen was seen as largely political. But as Catherine O'Donnell Kaplan reveals, some Americans saw a need for a realm of public men outside politics. They believed that neither the nation nor they themselves could achieve virtue and happiness through politics alone. Imagining a different kind of citizenship, they founded periodicals, circulated manuscripts, and conversed about poetry, art, and the nature of man. They pondered William Godwin and Edmund Burke more carefully than they did candidates for local elections and insisted other Americans should do so as well. Kaplan looks at three groups in particular: the Friendly Club in New York City, which revolved around Elihu Hubbard Smith, with collaborators such as William Dunlap and Charles Brockden Brown; the circle around Joseph Dennie, editor of two highly successful periodicals; and the Anthologists of the Boston Athenaeum. Through these groups, Kaplan demonstrates, an enduring and influential model of the man of letters emerged in the first decade of the nineteenth century."

Men of Letters in the Early Republic: Cultivating Forums of Citizenship

Arvustused

"Kaplan has discovered the moment when capital-C Culture was invented in the United States and its original structural form. This book will become a standard work in the cultural history of the new Republic and a classic on the origins of the American intellectual class." - David S. Shields, University of South Carolina"

Acknowledgments vii
List of Illustrations xi
Introduction 1
CHAPTER
1. Sensibility and Sociability at Work in the World
13
CHAPTER
2. Projects Literary and Moral: A World of Creation and Exchange
42
CHAPTER
3. Two Visions of Circulation: The Medical Repository and "The Institutions of the Republic of Utopia"
87
CHAPTER
4. He Summons Genius to His Aid: Joseph Dennie and the Farmer's Weekly Museum, 1795-1800
114
CHAPTER
5. Ungentle Readers: The Port Folio, 1801-1805
140
CHAPTER
6. These Quiet Regions: The Boston Athenaeum and the Monthly Anthology, and Boston Review, 1804-1811
184
CHAPTER
7. The Port Folio Remade, 1806-1812
216
Conclusion 231
Index 235
Catherine O'Donnell Kaplan is assistant professor of history at Arizona State University.