Yankee Yarns

Storytelling and the Invention of the National Body in Nineteenth-Century American Culture

Stefanie Schäfer author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:21st May '21

Should be back in stock very soon

Yankee Yarns cover

In this book, Stefanie Schäfer provides the first study of the Yankee’s many facets. Reading together Yankee Doodle, Brother Jonathan, Uncle Sam, the Yankee Peddler and the Down Easter, she highlights the Yankee’s ambiguity: His performance hinges on storytelling and fraudulence. An invention of transatlantic origin, the Yankee straddles regional and sectional, rural and urban, working class and bourgeois US identities. For nineteenth-century audiences at home and abroad, he becomes the hegemonic embodiment of US national character, its political and material culture and the homespun agent of its imperial fantasies.

[...] wide-ranging, richly researched, and carefully analytical. -- Matthew Pethers, University of Nottingham * ALH Online Review *
Bridging literary and cultural studies, Stefanie Schäfer considers the Yankee in various guises: as national representative, stage performer, wily businessman, and regional personality. With lively visual examples and rich archival materials, Yankee Yarns interrogates gendered and racialized notions of U.S. identity and offers fresh, valuable insights on the transatlantic creation of American character. -- Leslie E. Eckel, Suffolk University

ISBN: 9781474477444

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

324 pages