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Loyal Subjects Elizabeth Duquette

Loyal Subjects By Elizabeth Duquette

Loyal Subjects by Elizabeth Duquette


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Summary

Loyal Subjects considers how the Civil War complicated the cultural value of emotion, especially the ideal of sympathy.

Loyal Subjects Summary

Loyal Subjects: Bonds of Nation, Race, and Allegiance in Nineteenth-Century America by Elizabeth Duquette

When one nation becomes two, or when two nations become one, what does national affiliation mean or require? Elizabeth Duquette answers this question by demonstrating how loyalty was used during the U.S. Civil War to define proper allegiance to the Union. For Northerners during the war, and individuals throughout the nation after Appomattox, loyalty affected the construction of national identity, moral authority, and racial characteristics.

Loyal Subjects considers how the Civil War complicated the cultural value of emotion, especially the ideal of sympathy. Through an analysis of literary works written during and after the conflict-from Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Chiefly About War Matters" through Henry James's The Bostonians and Charles Chestnutt's "The Wife of His Youth," to the Pledge of Allegiance and W.E.B. Du Bois's John Brown, among many others-Duquette reveals that although American literary criticism has tended to dismiss the Civil War's impact, postwar literature was profoundly shaped by loyalty.

Loyal Subjects Reviews

"Loyal Subjects illuminates our understanding of sympathy, civic life, and literary production around and after the Civil War. By taking up the concept of loyalty as distinctive from sentiment and sympathy, Duquette makes a powerful case for the Civil War as a rich locus of narrative meaning." -- Caroline Levander * Rice University *
"Duquette has written a compelling, well-researched study of how literary texts 'defined, disseminated, and resisted' loyalty during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras. Recommended." * Choice *
"A provocative literary rendering of the idea of loyalty during the Civil War era."
* Journal of American History *
"Loyal Subjects illuminates our understanding of sympathy, civic life, and literary production around and after the Civil War. By taking up the concept of loyalty as distinctive from sentiment and sympathy, Duquette makes a powerful case for the Civil War as a rich locus of narrative meaning." -- Caroline Levander * Rice University *
"Duquette has written a compelling, well-researched study of how literary texts 'defined, disseminated, and resisted' loyalty during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras. Recommended." * Choice *
"A provocative literary rendering of the idea of loyalty during the Civil War era."
* Journal of American History *

About Elizabeth Duquette

ELIZABETH DUQUETTE is an associate professor of English at Gettysburg College. She has previously published articles with a focus on philosophy and nineteenth-century American literature.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Pledging Allegiance
1. Loyalty, Oaths, and the Nation
2. One Big Happy Family, Again?
3. Pledging Allegiance in Henry James
4. Loyalty's Slaves
5. Philosophies of Loyalty

Afterword
Notes
Index

Additional information

NPB9780813547800
9780813547800
0813547806
Loyal Subjects: Bonds of Nation, Race, and Allegiance in Nineteenth-Century America by Elizabeth Duquette
New
Hardback
Rutgers University Press
2010-08-19
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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