The Revival of Revolt


Book Description

This dissertation claims that a distinct mode of U.S. literature emerged in the one hundred years from the American Revolution to its centennial. I call this mode "literatures of enthusiasm." In this period, enthusiasm was a term used to describe persons--commoners, slaves, Native Americans, women, abolitionists--in active dissent against existing political conditions of tyranny and, in Thomas Carlyle's terms, motivated by eleutheromania (a "manic zeal for freedom"). I approach enthusiasm as a discursive matrix that orbits around insurrectionary publics--their prescriptive rights, limits, and forms; and I define literatures of enthusiasm as texts that participate in or encourage events of emancipatory or creative action extraneous to constituted power and deliberative norms. My primary task in this dissertation is to historicize an affect and discourse that was associated alternately with the terrors and ecstasies of radical democracy as expressed in passionate, anti-institutional, and collectivist political actions; and then to show how certain literatures formally and thematically work within the enthusiastic tradition in response to specific political crises of the era. With chapters on the American Revolution, slave revolts, Native American resistance, and the Civil War, this dissertation is the first to analyze American political enthusiasm in its own right and to argue for the centrality of enthusiasm in the formation of U.S. history and literary history. Chapter 1 establishes a broad theoretical and historical framework for my study of literatures of enthusiasm. I argue that enthusiasm should be seen as the embodied practice of "constituent power," the notion in political theory that individuals have the right to resist or abolish constitutional or legal power if this power uses the force of law to sustain unjust conditions. In Chapter 2 on the American Revolution, I argue that literatures of enthusiasm invent an insurgent American print culture that transforms aesthetic labor into a species of democratic crowd revolt. Not only in rebellion against English paradigms of government, texts by Mercy Otis Warren, Thomas Paine, and Phillis Wheatley shake off the prescriptive uses of English literary genres and press them into the service of planetary revolutionary demands. In Chapter 3, I read the War of 1812 as a Native American event of enthusiastic resistance to U.S. imperialism. Primarily through historical documents and lost historical fiction surrounding the pan-Indian confederacy and the War of 1812, I show how pro-American ideology of the war as a second American Revolution betrays a disavowed understanding that Native Americans now occupy (and always did occupy) the position of the American colonists in their revolt against tyranny. Chapter 4 examines the decisive but overlooked influence that enthusiasm had on antebellum U.S. abolitionist novels in the wake of the 1831 Southampton Insurrection. Novels of enthusiasm by Harriet Beecher Stowe and Martin Delany represent slave insurrection as a democratic, transatlantic phenomenon and turn novel writing itself into an enthusiastic contact zone with the reader, soliciting her to speed up the political crisis of slavery through direct intervention. In Chapter 5, my dissertation concludes with an analysis of Walt Whitman's 1860 poetics of enthusiasm. I make a case for Whitman, not as the national bard of American Unionism and integralism who speaks for all and heals the nation's fragmentation, but as the bard of American civil war and international sectarianism who speaks in the name of the enthusiast for queer democracy.




The Renaissance


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The Nationalist Revival


Book Description

"Essential reading." -- E.J. Dionne,The American Prospect Why Has Nationalism Come Roaring Back? Trump in America, Brexit in the U.K., anti-EU parties in Italy, Germany, France, the Netherlands, Austria, Poland, and Hungary, and nativist or authoritarian leaders in Turkey, Russia, India, and China -- Why has nationalism suddenly returned with a vengeance? Is the world headed back to the fractious conflicts between nations that led to world wars and depression in the early 20th Century? Why are nationalists so angry about free trade and immigration? Why has globalization become a dirty word? Based on travels in America, Europe, and Asia, veteran political analyst John B. Judis found that almost all people share nationalist sentiments that can be the basis of vibrant democracies as well as repressive dictatorships. Today's outbreak of toxic "us vs. them" nationalism is an extreme reaction to utopian cosmopolitanism, which advocates open borders, free trade, rampant outsourcing, and has branded nationalist sentiments as bigotry. Can a new international order be created that doesn't dismiss what is constructive about nationalism? As he did for populism inThe Populist Explosion, a runaway success after the 2016 election, Judis looks at nationalism from its modern origins in the 1800s to today to find answers.




Revolt


Book Description

Published in cooperation with the William P. Clements Center for Southwest Studies, Southern Methodist University. The Pueblo Revolt of 1680 is the most renowned colonial uprisings in the history of the American Southwest. Traditional text-based accounts tend to focus on the revolt and the Spaniards' reconquest in 1692—completely skipping over the years of indigenous independence that occurred in between. Revolt boldly breaks out of this mold and examines the aftermath of the uprising in colonial New Mexico, focusing on the radical changes it instigated in Pueblo culture and society. In addition to being the first book-length history of the revolt that incorporates archaeological evidence as a primary source of data, this volume is one of a kind in its attempt to put these events into the larger context of Native American cultural revitalization. Despite the fact that the only surviving records of the revolt were written by Spanish witnesses and contain certain biases, author Matthew Liebmann finds unique ways to bring a fresh perspective to Revolt. Most notably, he uses his hands-on experience at Ancestral Pueblo archaeological sites—four Pueblo villages constructed between 1680 and 1696 in the Jemez province of New Mexico—to provide an understanding of this period that other treatments have yet to accomplish. By analyzing ceramics, architecture, and rock art of the Pueblo Revolt era, he sheds new light on a period often portrayed as one of unvarying degradation and dissention among Pueblos. A compelling read, Revolt's "blood-and-thunder" story successfully ties together archaeology, history, and ethnohistory to add a new dimension to this uprising and its aftermath.




Unbelief and Revolution


Book Description

God's word illumines the darkness of society. Groen van Prinsterer's Unbelief and Revolution is a foundational work addressing the inherent tension between religion and modernity. As a historian and politician, Groen was intimately familiar with the growing divide between secular culture and the church in his time. Rather than embrace this division, these lectures, originally published in 1847, argue for a renewed interaction between the two spheres. Groen's work served as an inspiration for many contemporary theologians, and as a mentor to Abraham Kuyper, he had a profound impact on Kuyper's famous public theology. Harry Van Dyke, the original translator, reintroduces this vital contribution to our understanding of the relationship between religion and society.




Counterrevolution and Revolt


Book Description

In this book Herbert Marcuse makes clear that capitalism is now reorganizing itself to meet the threat of a revolution that, if realized, would be the most radical of revolutions: the first truly world-historical revolution. Capitalism's counterrevolution, however, is largely preventive, and in the Western world altogether preventive. Yet capitalism is producing its own grave-diggers, and Marcuse suggests that their faces may be very different from those of the wretched of the earth. The future revolution will be characterized by its enlarged scope, for not only the economic and political structure, not only class relatoins, but also humanity's relation to nature (both human and external nature) tend toward radical transformation. For the author, the "liberation of nature" is the connecting thread between the economic-political and the cultural revolution, between "changing the world" and personal emancipation.




Revival: The Sixteenth Century (1936)


Book Description

Often some one precious detail of war lurks in the middle of a book of the most unlikely description. After turning over tens of thousands of leaves in Latin, French, Italian, German, English, Spanish and Dutch print, one is left with an accumulation of observed phenomena - religious, cultural, literary, psychological - which the mind is forced to coordinate into some sort of general conclusions. As the author has stated in some of the pages which follow this preface, the author is profoundly averse to formulating 'philosophies of history', and though the author feels impelled to put in order the impression which much reading and pondering have left with me, the author does not pretend to link these impressions into any theory of evolution. There are as many 'ifs' in history as 'therefores'.